Credit

Actionable market insights delivered to your inbox weekly

One Trend That Isn’t Sustainable

More “bad news is good news” hit the tape today… The monthly ADP private jobs number came in far weaker than expected. I say ‘good news’ as it potentially means less Fed (or at least that’s the assumption). Here’s CNBC: “Job creation in the United States slowed more than expected in August, according to ADP, a sign that the surprisingly resilient U.S. economy might be starting to ease under pressure from higher interest rates”

Will a US Debt Downgrade be a ‘Bearish’ Catalyst?

Earlier this week, Fitch Ratings downgraded the U.S.’ credit rating. Stocks slipped a little on the news and bond yields ticked higher. The US 10-year treasury yield is now north of 4.10%. Fitch cited “expected fiscal deterioration over the next three years” and an erosion of governance. Hard to argue. Fiscal restraint is not one of the government’s strengths. But this isn’t entirely new news. For example, the credit agency placed the nation’s rating on watch in May following a near-default after members of Congress butted heads over raising the debt ceiling. However, this put the wheels in motion….

Bond Market Agrees with the Fed

Two months ago – the bond market was at odds with the Fed. Fixed income markets felt the Fed were going to be forced to cut rates as many as three times this year. For e.g., the gap between the US 2-yr yield and the Fed funds rate was in excess of 100 basis points. At the time I questioned who would be right? Bonds or the Fed? Fast forward to today and the gap has closed considerably… bonds have now realigned with the Fed’s way of thinking; i.e. expect higher for longer