Bond Bears Beware

 | Jun 02, 2022 01:35AM ET

This post was originally published at TopDown Charts

  • Global sovereign bonds caught a bid during the back half of May after a sentiment washout and classic contrarian bottoming signal.

  • Hot Eurozone inflation and buoying policies in China are not enough to offset apparent major global growth risks.

  • All eyes are back on the Fed with earnings season behind us and quantitative tightening commencing this month

More troubling global economic data hit the tape earlier this week. China’s manufacturing sector continued to run in contraction territory, with its purchasing managers’ index inching up to 49.6, still below the key 50 threshold. Then in Europe, inflation notched an all-time high at 8.1% year-on-year. Eurozone CPI verified much hotter than analysts were expecting. Meanwhile, in the US, the Economic Surprise Index has deteriorated—both Citigroup’s and Bloomberg’s indexes are at year-to-date lows.

Weighing the Risks/h2

The world continues to battle near-term inflationary pressures and a growing global growth scare. Upshots might be optimism regarding China’s COVID lockdowns easing and steps that its government has taken to boost growth (and its stock market). Still, risks are to the bearish side. We see that in what’s happening with bond yields around the world. Once viewed as a risky asset class due to surging yields, fixed-income buyers have stepped up as growth expectations decline.

Taking Note/h2

The US 10-year yield peaked on May 9 at 3.17%, about on par with its 2018 high during the previous tightening cycle. Second-quarter GDP estimates then retreated as corporate earnings and broad economic gauges revealed somewhat tepid growth. Sure enough, full-year 2022 and 2023 growth cuts came about as did a lowering of S&P 500 price targets for year-end. The 10-year note drifted down toward 2.7% last week as the market expected a less aggressive Fed tightening process. This week, yields ticked back up to near 2.9%, still well below the May peak.

Featured Chart: US 10Y Treasury Note Yield Drifts Lower as Consensus Bulls (inverted) Recovers