Rates Spark: Pivot Alert

 | Oct 04, 2022 22:58

Markets are smelling blood in the water, but do they have enough evidence to price a policy turnaround? Not yet in our view. The BoE’s reluctance to buy gilts is a sign that it hasn’t given up the fight against inflationh2 Markets on high alert for a central bank pivot/h2

The sight of a bond rally when investors smell a whiff of a central bank pivot is something to behold. The root cause of the recent re-pricing lower in rates can be traced back to two factors: the global economic slowdown and resurgent fears for financial stability.

The former is nothing new, and investors were wrong-footed by a surprisingly resilient US economy as recently as August, lending credence to the hawkish tone of the Fed, and by extension for the Bank of England (BoE), and European Central Bank (ECB). The need for emergency BoE intervention in the gilt market last week has brought the latter to the fore. While most expected the dramatic jump in rates to translate into financial stress, the timing and location of the first crisis were difficult to predict with any degree of precision.

All this begs the question: is this really a turning point in central banks’ tightening cycles, or at least have tightening expectations gone far enough? Any answer to that question has to start with the Fed. There were signs last week that financial stress is starting to register in its consciousness, most notably with Lael Brainard’s speech on Friday, and with Thomas Barkin expressing concerns about the spillover of a stronger dollar yesterday.

h2 Recent hopes of a pivot have been disappointed/h2

Recent hopes of a pivot have been disappointed, however. Despite signs that a housing recession is already there, it is unclear whether economic circumstances have changed enough to prompt a policy change. Investors, however, may secretly be hoping for a slower pace of hikes going forward, or for Quantitative Tightening to be reconsidered. The RBA hiking only 25bp against a 50bp consensus overnight may well have reinforced these hopes.

Swaps have pared back hike expectations as financial stress spreads