Bond Bloodbath Supports Dollar

 | Oct 28, 2016 06:41AM ET

Friday October 28: Five things the markets are talking about

With capital markets growing more confident that the Fed will raise U.S. interest rates by year-end has treasury yields backing up across the curve and making the “mighty” dollar even more attractive.

The U.S. Dollar Index has risen +3.7% this month, currently trading atop at 98.93 overnight, just an inch away from the psychologically important 100 level.

Boosted by this spike in treasury yields this week, the dollar is scaling to new heights versus a number of currency pairs – JPY (¥105.22) is trading through the psychological ¥105 handle, China’s yuan is exchanging hands at new six-month lows, while the Turkish lira ($3.1247) has slumped to a new record low outright all on rate differentials.

Nonetheless, this morning’s U.S data could potentially throw a spanner in the works for the dollar bull’s current game plan.

There is no doubt; the U.S economy has something to prove. Currently, stubbornly low growth; tepid inflation is fanning some fears that a recession could be next. Today’s advance GDP report (08:30am EDT – +2.5%e vs.+1.4%) could dispel some of the markets concerns and maybe prove that the U.S economy not only remains on solid footing but also looks poised to accelerate again.

1. Fixed income dealers steepen their curves

Bonds continue to be sold in most denominations as dealers speculate that the end of “free” money is upon us.

Ten-year (benchmark) yields in the U.S, Germany, Australia and the U.K have rallied to levels last seen five-months ago on expectations that the Fed will hike in December while other central bank are on the cusp of reigning in their own stimulus programs.

Next week there are a plethora of key central bank meeting (RBA, BoJ, BoE and FOMC).

There are a number of reasons why investors are reluctant to hold the belly of the curve. Fait complete, well almost – Dec. fed fund futures have climbed +5bps this week to +73%. Yesterday, preliminary Q3 GDP in the U.K beat expectations, killing off bets that the BoE will lower borrowing costs anytime soon. In Japan, BoJ’s Kuroda has even warned that longer-term bond yields may rise.

U.S 10s have backed up +1bps to +1.86%, taking this month’s advance to +27bps. Rates on similar-maturity bonds in Australia and New Zealand have climbed +6bps, while rates in Germany have rallied +1bps.

However, U.K Gilts are the outlier, having rallied +20bps this week to levels not seen since the Brexit vote and more than +50bps this month.