U.S. Rates Spark: And Then They Hiked Slower

 | Jul 28, 2022 07:06AM ET

The Fed delivered another 75bps of tightening but attention is turning to the end of this cycle. In Europe, German inflation could light a fire under the front-end but long-end rates seem determined to price the looming recession, with or without the ECB’s helph2 The peak in market rates is consistent with where the Fed now is in the cycle/h2

Minimal market reaction to the 75bps hike. If anything inflation breakevens were a tad higher, but not much in it. Nominal rates are seeing little change in terms of impact effect. But the lead up to this has seen market rates fall, calming inflation expectations, pushing towards delivering on what was expected and no more. Meanwhile, the 5-year continues to richen to the curve, strengthening the turning point story for market rates, having set that peak at 3.5% for the 10-year a little over a month ago.

The influential 5yr area is now signalling a turn in the cycle

We think market rates have peaked. Specifically, the 3.5% area reached by the 10-year Treasury yield in mid-June was most likely it. We argue that it’s not about the level per se. It’s about the cycle, and the fact that the influential 5-year area is now signalling a turn in the cycle. Specifically, the 5-year yield is no longer sitting above an interpolation between the 2-year and 10-year (and trading cheap), but is now trading rich.

h2 5-year coming in on the curve confirms that rates are looking to the end of this cycle/h2