Rates Spark: Bonds are Back… In Their Range

 | Apr 26, 2023 05:47AM ET

Markets are understandably skittish about the health of the financial sector, which allows bonds to act as a safe haven. We would be wary of acting on large market moves ahead of a week heavy in event risks – but investors being sidelined might be just what causes such movesh2 A lot of reasons for bonds to rally, but no coherent narrative/h2

The reasons for this week’s bond rally are manifold, but they don’t really add up to a coherent change in the macro narrative. Spanish PPI turning negative on both a monthly and annual basis caught markets off guard, just as Schnabel signalled a 50bp hike is on the table the evening before. A couple of more moderate views from Philip Lane and Francois Villeroy helped temper hawkish momentum, but we also think a return of banking worries put investors on alert for a repeat of the bond rally that took place after the Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) failure.

A return of banking worries put investors on alert for a repeat of the bond rally that took place after the SVB failure

Despite a further sell-off in First Republic Bank (NYSE:FRC) shares after its results were published, it is European financials that dragged their domestic equity indices down and provoked a further move to safe havens. This negative correlation between bonds and stock prices – long the norm, though all but vanished in 2022 – probably warrants an explanation. A slowing economy and inflation probably helped on that front. Still, we think it is the growing concern over trouble in the financial sector spilling into the real economy that is allowing investors to give bonds some of their safety value back.

For now, however, systemic stress indicators remain at manageable levels. Estr basis and financial CDS indices have ticked up but remain well below stressed levels.

  • Systemic risk indicators have ticked up this week, but remain below stressed levels