Rates Spark: No COVID Rally For Bonds

 | Jan 06, 2022 12:40AM ET

Focus turns to syndicated bond deals, with borrowers hoping for no new volatility from this week’s key economic releases. By and large, rates markets seem to have acquired a good deal of Covid immunity. This is in part due to ECB purchases being largely decided for the year already. With the US 10yr back in the 1.7% area, now what? h2 Here's why US rates have risen strongly/h2

Elevated inflation is not a new story, but the Fed is an evolving one. An accelerated taper, and a quick step towards rate hikes is on the menu for 1Q and 2Q. That's not a "next year" story any more. It's front-and-center, which helps to concentrate minds.

As always when we get these moves there is a debate as to whether this is a price or quantity driven event. So far I see it as a price driven one. In other words, it is not being driven by huge volumes. It is more driven by a re-calibration of yields towards more sensible levels, without much resistance. Hence big moves have been achieved with relative ease.

It does feel like this can continue. It is reminiscent of the move we had in Feb/Mar 2021. That ground to a halt as the 10yr hit the 1.7% area and was met by a wave of fixed rate receiving and a re-build in duration exposure. This time it feels like we can push beyond that, to more elevated levels before market longs step in.

h2 10Y yields are on the rise, and 2s5s10s indicate more is to come/h2