Rates Spark: Range-Bound Ahead of Inflation Releases

 | Apr 25, 2023 06:16AM ET

We assess this year's market themes against our 2023 outlook calls. Rates remain range-bound, and curves have only steepened moderately, but rates differentials keep narrowing. We expect little appetite to take new risks ahead of key inflation releases on Fridayh2 Taking stock of markets so far in 2023/h2

We would summarise the three main themes for this year identified in our 2023 rates outlook as follows: lower rates, steeper curves, and rate convergence. Four months in, the picture is mixed. On the positive side, we remain convinced that a further drop in rates is on the cards.

Events since then have reinforced our view that an economic slowdown and drop in inflation will allow central banks to pause and then reverse their hiking cycles. Our outright rates view hasn’t panned out. Rates remain at – or in some places above – where they started the year. We think it is fair to say that they have been trading in a range since the start of the year, currently near the top.

Our outright rates view hasn’t panned out

This upcoming policy pivot is a clear driver of lower rates, although it should also come with a rebound in term premia. In other words, a re-steepeing of yield curves. We have noted in a dedicated analysis that while the upcoming end to the Fed's hiking cycle should limit further flattening impetus, re-steepening and dis-inversion will have to wait for cuts to materialise. We think this will occur by the fourth quarter of this year for the Fed, but it remains the subject of much debate. We score a little higher on this call, as curves have re-steepened on the back of the US regional bank crisis – but they still remain inverted, particularly in the US.

The US regional banking crisis is yet another indicator that points to a marked slowdown in the US later this year. The European economy’s resilience has frustrated our call for an end to the European Central Bank hiking cycle, which we now see ending in June and which the market implies could continue until July. Our call for a convergence in rates was mostly driven by a call for lower dollar rates, but Europe’s resilience has accelerated the narrowing of dollar-euro rates differentials. We should also note that the recent strength seen in UK data has meant sterling bonds outperformed their US dollar counterparts, tarnishing our record for our third 2023 call.

Narrowing rates differentials have been a key theme in 2023, in otherwise range-bound markets.