US Crude Had A Volatile Night, Spiking Into $46.53

 | Jul 07, 2017 02:29AM ET

Today is a fixed income story, with the ramifications of the trends developing in both nominal and ‘real’ (or inflation adjusted) bond yields having increasing bearings in equities, currencies and more progressively Emerging markets.

The lead we have been dealt from offshore markets is clearly negative and has been driven most prominently from the European bond markets. One just has to look at the German fixed income market, which to be fair was selling off into the ECB minutes (21:30 aest), but caught another leg higher with the market getting quite upset at the view that the bank was considering removing its easing bias on asset purchases.

This really shouldn’t surprise too greatly, but the impact of a market so long duration is that we have seen long-term interest rates selling-off fairly heavily, with the German 10-Year bund up settling at the highest levels since January 2016. Adjust this for inflation expectations and we can see German (if we use this as a proxy of Europe) ‘real’ yields at the highest levels since February 2016.

In the US, most importantly we are seeing the five-year ‘real’ treasury (see chart below) moving to 25 bp and the highest levels of the year and the equity markets has caught on that this really does represent tighter financial conditions, the very thing the Federal Reserve wanted to see. Tech doesn’t like this one bit, but neither does emerging markets and we can see the EEM ETF (iShares MSCI Emerging market ETF) falling 1.2%. Keep an eye on the EEM as a break of $40.90 (15 June low) and the downside momentum should accelerate.