NFP To Deliver Roller Coaster Price Action

 | May 08, 2015 06:57AM ET

The U.S bond bear can breath a little easier heading into this morning nonfarm payroll number. However, at one point yesterday during the Euro session, it was looking very bleak with U.S. 10’s backing up to its new 2015 high yield at +2.32%. Since April, the heavy selling in U.S Treasury’s came mostly on the back of the rout in Euro bonds. Yes, U.S data has not been great, but the rates are higher this week for reasons that are not directly related to the Fed or the U.S economy.

European government debt markets are usually considered relatively stable with intraday yield moving only a few hundredths of a percentage point a day. In under three week’s, the “trade of a life time” saw 10-year bund yields rally +75bps from record low yields (+0.05%). Yesterday alone, the yield surged +21 bps to +0.80% (its highest level since last November) before easing back below +0.60% as hedge funds immediately stepped in to pare positions ahead of NFP. Interestingly, Euro peripheral yields saw weaker gains and tightened significantly to bunds as corporate buyers finally appeared. There seems to be no apparent cause for the yesterday’s intraday spike, besides a general lack of liquidity. Because German bund yields act as a benchmark for European financial markets, the violent yield moves have led to a seismic shift in multiple asset classes – DAX down -9% and the EUR up +5% against the dollar since April 10.