Rates Spark: Unconvincing Doves

 | Oct 25, 2022 11:42

The Bank of England holds the keys to the next gilt rally, if it can convince markets that a more dovish path is the right choice. The USD curve re-steepening on pivot hopes has run out of steam, expect limited appetite to trade such a momentous policy change until next week’s Federal Open Market Committee meetingh2 Gilts hope for a more prudent fiscal tone/h2

Rishi Sunak’s appointment as prime minister was greeted by a relief rally in gilts yesterday. We think this is justified by a lower political risk premia. The market hope is that Sunak, a former chancellor of the exchequer and architect of tax rises that were subsequently reversed by the ill-fated mini-budget, will err on the side of fiscal caution. In practice, this would mean keeping Jeremy Hunt as chancellor, no attempt to delay the budget statement due on 31 October, and no attempt to steer away from the fiscal consolidation that is now widely expected. We should get a pretty good idea of at least the first two after Sunak's speech today.

The ball is now firmly in the BoE’s camp

Provided all these assumptions hold, the ball is now firmly in the BoE’s camp. The swap curve is still pricing a terminal rate around 5% which in turn is limiting 10-year gilt yields’ ability to rally much further below 4%. Dave Broadbent, and then Catherine Mann, have signalled this is excessive. Chief Economist Huw Pill is scheduled to speak today. Him throwing his weight behind this view would help chip away at market pricing, but there is a long way to go. Meanwhile, the political risk premium in gilts is being eroded further. They outperformed 10-year Treasuries more than 30bp yesterday, and 10-year Bunds by more than 20bp.

Realistically, a further drop in rates at both ends of the curve is possible. Some of the jump in BoE hike expectations in September is explained by the view some took that the Bank would have to hike rates to defend the pound. The stabilisation in the pound in itself could be the basis for some re-pricing lower in rates. On the other hand, we note that the BoE has struggled to convince markets of its less hawkish view than what is priced in the curve pretty much since the start of this hiking cycle around a year ago. This means a reversion lower will need a catalyst. Another wave of fiscal consolidation in next Monday’s budget could achieve this.

h2 Sunak's appointment as PM further reduces the political risk premium baked in gilts/h2