Snowball Rally, But Does it Change Anything?
Snowball Rally, But Does it Change Anything?
After more than 2 weeks of relentless selling that took yields to their highest levels since 2007, bonds have increasingly been sitting on dry powder--at least from a technical standpoint. Today's PMI data provided the spark. The explosion of bond buying began in Europe where PMIs were much weaker across the board in the services sector. US numbers weren't as bad by comparison, but far enough below consensus to greenlight the rally. Interestingly, and perhaps importantly, the rally didn't let up ahead of the 20yr Treasury auction, but the auction was decent nonetheless. This increases the temptation to conclude "the top is in" for rates, but that top is only as good as the forthcoming data is bad. We also need to see if Powell has anything interesting to say on Friday (or at least if enough of the market was waiting on Jackson Hole before making even bigger moves).
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- S&P Global PMI
- Services: 51.0 vs 52.2 f'cast, 52.3 prev
- Manufacturing: 47.0 vs 49.3 f'cast, 49.0 prev
- S&P Global PMI
Big gains on EU PMI data. 10yr down 9bps at 4.24 and MBS up nearly half a point.
Sideways at stronger levels, despite some volatility in MBS due to illiquidity. UMBS up half a point and 10yr yields down 12.4bps at 4.208
10yr down 15bps at lows of the day, 4.184. MBS up 18 ticks (.56).