Political Uncertainty Hits U.S. Markets As 'Trump Trade' Takes A Pause

 | Feb 28, 2017 01:29AM ET

While the majority of the financial world has its focus on every move in Washington D.C., there is another very important development happening in the German bond market. What was once the best short bet for some very high profile investors; it’s now become the next widow-maker trade as German yields plunge to levels not seen before. While U.S. yields have begun to reflate on higher growth and inflation potential, the German interest rate market has refused to join, as political worries across Europe have made German fixed income the place to hide. In addition, the ECB continues to buy bonds monthly as part of their continuing QE. All the buying and lack of selling has driven the two-year German bond yield to less than -0.9%. Not sure how anyone without a forex bet makes money in two-year paper from here, but it does tell me that there are many worried European investors. This can be great news if you are a distressed or value buyer of European risk assets. But with yields falling so precipitously, one has to think that prices could get even cheaper. The rising uncertainty has been great for day-to-day volatility and noise which my international counter-trend algorithms enjoy. But for most global investors, the action in German bonds only raises the hair on the back of our necks. So keep an eye on those bonds trading in the clouds. Their direction might be your sign to buy Euro risk assets or to bolt the main gate.

The yield on Germany's 2-Year bond has fallen to another record negative low this morning as bondholders snap up German assets amid escalating fears about the EU’s political stability. Dubbed one of the “most sought after assets in financial markets“, the price on Germany’s two-year “schatz” bond has been pushed to an all-time high this week, driving yields head-long towards the minus 1 per cent mark. Yields are currently trading at minus 0.96 according to Bloomberg and have declined 15 basis points this week – their best performance since the depths of the eurozone crisis in July 2012. The rally has been turbo-charged by fears that Marine Le Pen is closing the gap on her rivals in France’s presidential election and could come good on her promise to take the eurozone’s second largest economy out of the single currency area.