Rates Spark: Markets Are Doing Central Bankers’ Job

 | May 10, 2022 05:02AM ET

Tightening financial conditions could mean markets see less of a need to hike rates. It is still early days and previous signs of worsening economic outlooks were met with a shrug by rates markets. Supply is also clouding the picture, but further curve bull-steepening would be a significant macro signal.h2 Rising US real rates and falling US inflation expectations/h2

The price action of late has been remarkable. The big upside test seen for US yields has been driven overwhelmingly by rises in real rates, and that pressure remains.

At the same time, the big fall in US market rates late yesterday was driven by a fall in US inflation expectations. The latter bit will please the Fed. They delivered 50bp, and the promise to deliver another 100bp in the next couple of months, while chunky, is still below where the market discount had been.

The risk the Fed ran was that inflation expectations could have spiked. That has not happened. In fact inflation expectations have eased. Instead it’s real market rates that have risen.

The thing is this can go unchecked, as the Fed will not step in to prevent a rise in real rates, as such rises are in fact doing the job of the Fed and tightening things up.

This combination of higher real rates and easing inflation expectations looks like the current dominant trend, and which way nominal market rates go will depend on which of the two dominates.

Right now it looks like the rise in real rates is dominating, and the net re-steepening of the curve points in the same direction. Meanwhile the risk asset sell-off seems to be dampening inflation expectations most.

h2 Central banks have hit a nerve/h2

The stress in financial markets is spreading. It seems like the associated tightening of financial conditions has struck a chord with markets. As is sometimes the case, rates could be slightly ahead of the game here.

The theory goes like this: markets, forward-looking as always, anticipate a slower path for growth as a result of aggressive central bank tightening. This pushes the valuation of risk assets down and bond yields up. The net effect is a cooling of economic growth expectations as financing costs and access to capital tighten.

h2 The EUR and GBP front-ends have more downside/h2