Quarterly Outlook
Fixed Income Outlook: Bonds Hit Reset. A New Equilibrium Emerges
Althea Spinozzi
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Key points:
The Saxo Quick Take is a short, distilled opinion on financial markets with references to key news and events.
Macro data and headlines:
Macro events (times in GMT): Germany Nov. IFO Business Climate survey (0900), US Nov. Dallas Fed Manufacturing Activity (1530), ECB Chief Economist Lane to speak (1630), US 2-year Treasury Auction (1800)
Earnings events:
For all macro, earnings, and dividend events check Saxo’s calendar.
Equities:
Volatility: Volatility indicators softened as the VIX declined 9.66% to 15.24, and VIX1D plunged 28.25% to 9.93, reflecting reduced near-term market risks. VIX futures also dropped, while market futures were buoyant ahead of the holiday-shortened week. Implied volatility remains subdued, with expected moves for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 at 0.92% and 1.37%, respectively, largely reflecting the reduced trading window. Key options activity focuses on Nvidia, Tesla, and CrowdStrike as investors adjust positions ahead of earnings and economic data releases.
Fixed Income: Last week, European sovereign bonds rallied significantly after eurozone business activity data showed a sharp contraction, prompting traders to anticipate earlier rate cuts from the European Central Bank. German 2-year yields dropped 12 basis points to 1.99%, leading the decline, while 10-year Bund yields fell 7 basis points to 2.25%. Markets priced in 37 basis points of ECB cuts for next month, an increase of 8 basis points compared to the previous day. Treasuries experienced a volatile week. Early gains were reversed after stronger-than-expected US PMI data suggested resilience in the services sector. This led to curve flattening, with front-end yields rising slightly and long-end yields gaining support from demand. The 10-year Treasury yield ended the week at approximately 4.405%. This week, Germany’s IFO business climate index and eurozone CPI data will shape expectations for ECB policy, while speeches from ECB officials will provide further insight. In the US, markets will focus on the FOMC minutes, the Fed’s preferred PCE inflation gauge, and GDP and durable goods orders. Black Friday shopping data may also signal consumer strength. With auctions of 2-year, 5-year, and 7-year Treasuries scheduled early in the week, market volatility is likely, especially as the Thanksgiving holiday thins trading activity.
Commodities: Gold surged by the most in 20 months last week, only to tumble back below USD 2,700 overnight, with focus now on support at USD 2,650. Driven by US data strength almost ruling out a December rate cut, and after Trump picked Scott Bessent as his choice for incoming US Treasury Secretary. Seen as a fiscal hawk, this may inject more stability into the US economy and financial markets, thereby lowering haven demand from investors worried about the US debt situation. Crude trades lower after Israel said it is nearing a ceasefire agreement with Hezbollah, while industrial metals trade higher, supported by a weaker dollar and Bessent’s more moderate views on tariffs. EU gas prices may ease on milder weather this week, but a recent and premature decline in inventories has left the market on edge ahead of the peak winter demand period.
Currencies:
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