How the situation in the Middle East will evolve is still very uncertain, but high-level diplomatic efforts are all about containing the situation. Taking the oil price as a gauge for the tensions, we see no let up, with prices still 8% higher compared to just before the crisis.

At the same time, domestic data in the US continues to paint a picture of surprising resilience. Strong retail sales data proved wrong earlier indications derived from weekly credit card spending data. Industrial production data also surprised to the upside. Growth estimates for the second half of this year are being revised up, with our economist also seeing third-quarter growth in the region of 4% as likely.

The more dovish tones of Federal Reserve speakers that pointed to the rise in long-end term premia doing some of the Fed’s work and lessening the need for further hikes look less convincing in the face of resilient data. Markets are seeing chances slightly tipped in favour of another hike, not yet in November but in the months ahead. But more importantly, the prospect for meaningful rate cuts is being pared back, with the December SOFR futures implied rate having risen above 4.3%. For the 2Y Treasury, this has meant a rise to 5.23%, the highest since 2006.

The US Treasury 10Y yield has risen above 4.84% again. Recall that 4.8% was the level where it closed the week following a strong payrolls number and just ahead of the Middle East conflict. Supply has probably played a part as well. After the weak 30y auction of last week, more price concession ahead of tonight’s 20Y UST tap should have contributed to yields surging higher again. Usually, auction-related market moves prove fleeting, but this time around the weaker demand is also symptomatic of more general concerns about the sustainability of the US government’s fiscal policies.

Over in Europe, yields are also moving higher again, though not as fast as their US counterpart. The 10y Bund yield closed above 2.88%, with the yield gap gradually widening again to above 190bp.

Long-term inflation expectations are still closer to their lowest reading since July, with the 5y5y forward inflation swap around 2.5%. However, oil prices complicate the situation for the European Central Bank as it risks putting a timely return to the inflation target out of reach. Front-end rates are above where they left off before the Middle East conflict.

Source: Hellenic Shipping News