Market Spinner

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MARKET MOVES

•Last week concerns about the global economy and Fed monetary policy drove market sentiment.

•Cut off of gas supplies by Russia introduced further major uncertainty into the outlook and also raised the risk of a potential oil embargo by the EU.

•China’s COVID-19 lockdown measures and the ongoing war in Ukraine raised further concerns over supply chain disruption.

•In Europe, inflationary pressures ticked up further, in particular, core inflation came in at 3.5% up from 2.9% providing ammunition to the hawks for the next ECB meeting.

•US GDP numbers disappointed, with the US economy contracting by 1.4%.

 

 

KEY EVENTS

•   The main event of the week is the FED’s monetary policy decision. A +50bps hike in interest rate is extremely likely.

•   The start date of the quantitative tightening should be released as well as other details regarding the balance-sheet run-off.

•   The US labour market will also be in the spotlight, with the ADP survey and nonfarm payrolls due on Wednesday and Friday.

•   EU energy ministers will hold a crisis meeting this Monday to discuss Moscow’s demand that European buyers pay for Russian gas in rubles.

•   Corporate earnings will continue to provide colour, this week results from travel and energy companies are expected with a focus on Europe.

 

A CHART SPEAKS A THOUSAND WORDS

 

 

Credit markets: decompression in sight

Euro Credit markets are among the best performers year to date compared to other liquid asset classes. Yet spreads after a tightening in March have widened recently to incorporate lower growth prospects associated with a high level of uncertainty. At current level spreads are consistent with our economic scenario which comprises low growth but no recession. Corporate fundamentals will slightly deteriorate over the coming quarters. European default rates should pick up from 1.5% in early 2022 to 3% at the end of the year. Ratings will also deteriorate, mostly in very cyclical sectors and the lower end of the rating spectrum. Technicals should not be of great help either. The ECB will stop purchasing bonds in a few weeks and despite outflows have largely stopped since March and we are not seeing money returning to credit yet despite attractive absolute yields. For instance, Euro BBBs are now yielding 2.3% a few basis points away from the Covid peak. Yet the decompression hasn’t yet taken place. This should not last as downward economic revision will hurt HY the most and more worrying the quasi closure of the HY market for more than two months will either result in very wide new issue premiums, or a severe repricing of the liquidity premium, both pressuring secondary levels. Hence, we continue to keep an OW in credit but a very defensive one with a preference for IG over HY.