Rates Spark: Crunch Time

 | May 09, 2023 06:46AM ET

Headlines surrounding the abundant risks to the outlook dictate near-term direction, but we see a trend toward lower rates. The Senior Loan Officers Survey highlighted the squeeze on growth prospects. ECB hawks will face headwinds as US developments largely dictate financial sentiment.h2 Look for lower rates as risks to the outlook abound/h2

The Fed delivered its latest hike last week - in line with what markets currently price and we largely agree. From here on the market rates trend should be down as risks to the economic outlook abound and should eventually outweigh.

In the US, the failure to raise the debt ceiling poses a large risk to financial stability and the economy and will likely come to dictate headlines in coming weeks. But think also of the simmering banking tensions and their knock-on effects, with the Senior Loan Officers Survey yesterday providing evidence of further credit tightening and thus compounding the recessionary risks coming from rapidly higher borrowing costs, as our economist notes. But keep in mind that when the Fed made its decision last week, it already had the survey at hand and Fed Chair Powell noted it was broadly consistent with the FOMC’s thinking.

The Senior Loan Officers Survey yesterday provided evidence of further credit tightening

The Fed also released its latest financial stability report yesterday. The top of the list of most cited risks was still occupied by persistent inflation and monetary tightening. Even if Wednesday’s CPI report could show the annual rate falling to below 5%, this still means inflation is running well above the Fed’s 2% target. And, even if market-priced inflation forwards eventually point to the Fed coming close to its target a year from now, the NY Fed’s survey of consumer expectations saw inflation expectations at the medium and longer horizon increase slightly - three-year ahead is now at 2.9% and five-year ahead at 2.6%.

Rates actually inched further up yesterday, with 10Y UST reclaiming 3.5%. On this particular day, this was probably more due to a heavy slate of corporate debt issuance. But near-term our view of lower market rates by year-end does not exclude temporary moves higher. At this stage, direction is dictated by macro data and headlines surrounding banking tensions and the debt ceiling.

h2 Even upbeat inflation break-evens suggest returning to 2% will be a struggle/h2