EU Bond Issue Doubles On High Demand; U.S. Treasuries Absorb Hawkish Fed Turn

 | Jun 22, 2021 04:03AM ET

Investors left no doubt in anyone’s mind that they like bonds from the European Union as they ordered €142 billion of the first bonds in the pandemic recovery program, prompting the banks managing the deal to double the issue to €20 billion and pushing down the yield to 0.086% from the 0.1% originally envisaged.

The EU will follow up with two more syndicated issues this summer as it plans to raise €80 billion more this year. The total program calls for up to €800 billion of bond issues through 2026.

The inaugural issue was marred by a kerfuffle over banning some of the world’s major banks from the syndicate because—horrors—they had in the past been involved in market-rigging scandals. Find a bank that hasn’t been embroiled in some underhanded activity at one time or another.

The European Commission barred Deutsche Bank (DE:DBKGn), Crédit Agricole (PA:CRAP), JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM), Citigroup (NYSE:C), Barclays (LON:BARC), UniCredit (MI:CRDI), Bank of America (NYSE:BAC), Nomura (T:8604), NatWest (LON:NWG), and Natixis (PA:CNAT). The first eight have already been reinstated after promising to behave themselves and showing evidence they have taken remedial efforts after they got caught.

Critics quickly branded the unprecedented measure as protectionism (in one case modified by the word “petty”). Five of the 10 banks were American or British.

The temporary ban left the syndication mostly in the hands of what could kindly be called second-tier managers—BNP Paribas (PA:BNPP), Germany's DZ Bank, HSBC (LON:HSBA), Intesa Sanpaolo SpA (MI:ISP), Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS), Danske Bank (CSE:DANSKE), and Santander (MC:SAN). Given investor demand, it hardly seemed to matter, but why waste an opportunity to make an empty gesture.

h2 After Fed 'Shocker' Yield Curve Flattens/h2

Meanwhile, the U.S. Treasury market got a shock when the Federal Reserve unexpectedly shifted its consensus on when it might start raising rates. Thirteen of the 18 policymakers on the Federal Open Market Committee now think the Fed will have raised rates by the end of 2023, with seven looking for hikes in 2022, after the central bank had maintained for months it wouldn’t raise them before 2024.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note spiked on the news last Wednesday, to nearly 1.6% before receding to trade a tick under 1.5% on Monday.