Bonds Definitely Daring Jobs Report to Surge
Bonds Definitely Daring Jobs Report to Surge
10yr yields are now decisively below the levels seen BEFORE the last CPI report (the one that caused a jump from the 4.1's to the 4.3's). This has been accomplished without any shockingly downbeat econ data, and without the market ramping up bets on a friendlier rate trajectory from the Fed. In other words, it's some combination of supply/demand technicals (Treasury auction composition and Fed QT tapering effects) and, more importantly, a legitimate belief that economy is not at risk of reigniting inflation concerns. On that note, Friday's jobs report is in a position to undo much of the recent improvement if it makes a strong counterargument. The recent data and the bond market response are essentially daring the jobs report to surge.
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- Jobless Claims
- 217k vs 215k f'cast, 217k prev
- Continued Claims
- 1906k vs 1889k f'cast, 1898k prev
- Jobless Claims
Stronger on data and ECB announcement. 10yr down 3.9bps at 4.069. MBS up 5 ticks (.16) before accounting for roughly 2 ticks (.06) of illiquidity.
Gains erased in moderate, steady volume, and before Powell testimony. MBS up only 2 ticks (.06) and 10yr unchanged at 4.108.
Weakest levels just before 1pm and holding modest gains since then. 10yr down half a bp at 4.104. MBS up 3 ticks (.09).
Near best levels in MBS, up an eighth of a point. 10yr down 1.6bps at 4.092. Shorter-term Treasuries are doing even better.