Currencies

Global bond rout deepens before receding on relief rally


  • U.S., European, Japanese bond rout deepens
  • 10-year Treasury yields hit 16-year high above 4.88%
  • Wall Street mixed, Euro STOXX 600 lower

NEW YORK/LONDON, Oct 4 (Reuters) – A rout in government bond markets deepened on Wednesday with benchmark U.S. yields hitting fresh 16-year highs as investors bet that persistently high interest rates will slow world growth and dampen the appetite for riskier assets.

Treasury yields later receded on a cooler-than-expected U.S. private payrolls report that helped stocks on Wall Street rebound from Tuesday’s sharp sell-off.

Growth concerns weighed on crude oil and gold prices, and European equities (.STOXX) edged lower for a third day as retailer shares fell on a consumer spending pullback.

The day’s rally in bonds, whose price is inverse to yield, was likely short-lived, with the September unemployment report on Friday now the market’s next focus, said Kim Rupert, managing director of global fixed income at Action Economics in San Francisco.

“The sell-off has been really dramatic. It’s been rapid. It’s been huge,” Rupert said. “The market was so over-sold that it was looking for a catalyst to rally on and found it in ADP.”

Rupert referred to the ADP National Employment Report that showed U.S. private payrolls rose by 89,000 jobs in September, the smallest gain since January 2021.

The yield on 10-year Treasury notes touched 4.884%, a fresh 16-year high, while 30-year Treasury yields rose above 5% for the first time since August 2007.

“ADP is the canary in the coal mine that things are slowing,” said Rhys Williams, chief strategist at Sprouting Rock Asset Management in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania. “The upcoming job reports are going to be less robust than the previous few months.”

The market ignored a survey from the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) that showed the U.S. services sector slowing in September as new orders fell to a nine-month low. But inflation remained elevated and employment slowed only gradually.

The economy’s resilience, 18 months after the Federal Reserve started raising interest rates to cool demand, suggests that monetary policy could remain tight for some time.

Market expectations for a rate hike in November slid to a 23.7% chance from 28.2% on Tuesday, according to CME Group’s FedWatch Tool. Futures showed the Fed’s overnight rate staying above 5% through next July receded from pricing that level on Tuesday through September 2024.

MSCI’s gauge of stocks across the globe (.MIWD00000PUS) gained 0.02% and the pan-European STOXX 600 index (.STOXX) closed down 0.14%.

On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (.DJI) rose 0.01% and the S&P 500 (.SPX) gained 0.41% but the Nasdaq Composite (.IXIC) added 0.96%.

European bonds followed the U.S. rout, with yields on Germany’s benchmark 10-year debt rising above 3% for the first time since 2011, before slipping to 2.968%. The country’s 30-year yield climbed to its latest 12-year high.

Even Japan’s 10-year yield , which is capped by the Bank of Japan (BOJ), rose 4.5 bps to a decade high despite the BOJ offering to buy $4.5 billion worth of bonds on Wednesday.

Australian, Canadian and British government bond yields have also surged this week.

The moves in bond markets sucked money into the U.S. dollar, which was stronger than the euro. The dollar index , a measure of the U.S. currency against a basket of other currencies, eased 0.25%.

Earlier, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan (.MIAPJ0000PUS) sank to 11-month lows, shedding 1.1% for its second straight daily drop of more than 1%.

U.S. yields in real terms – subtracting inflation – are also at almost 15-year highs, in part because their move has not come with much of a shift in market gauges of inflation expectations.

THE DOLLAR’S MARCH

The yen was on the stronger side of 150 per dollar on Wednesday, after an unexpected but short-lived surge in the previous session stoked speculation that Japanese authorities may have intervened to support the currency.

The Japanese currency had breached the 150-per-dollar level on Tuesday before suddenly shooting to 147.3. There was no confirmation from Tokyo, where Japan’s finance minister and top currency diplomat have made no direct comment on the move.

The yen last stood at 149.10 per dollar.

The dollar’s march pushed the euro to its lowest in 10 months at $1.0448 overnight and sterling to a seven-month trough at $1.20535.

The euro last traded at $1.05, up 0.3% on the day. The pound was up a similar amount at $1.212.

“For now, the FX market is a bystander,” said SocGen strategist Kit Juckes, “watching Treasuries and waiting for them to break something.”

Fed officials see rising yields on long-term U.S. Treasury debt as not triggering alarm bells yet.

Oil prices tumbled by more than 5% following reports that Russia may lift its diesel ban in coming days and U.S. government data that indicated weak demand for gasoline.

U.S. crude futures fell $5.01 to settle at $84.22 a barrel, while Brent settled down $5.11 at $85.81.

Gold prices crept lower for the eighth consecutive session as elevated Treasury yields amid expectations that the Fed will keep rates higher for longer weighed on investor sentiment.

U.S. gold futures settled 0.4% lower at $1,834.80 an ounce.

Reporting by Herbert Lash, Additional reporting by Tom Wilson in London; Tom Westbrook in Sydney; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore, Will Dunham and Mark Potter

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Tom covers crypto companies, regulation and markets from London, focusing through 2022 on the Binance crypto exchange. He has worked at Reuters since 2014, with a previous posting to Tokyo where he uncovered abuses in Japan’s immigration system and won a joint Overseas Press Club award for reporting on the tobacco giant Philip Morris.



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