Bonds across the pond
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Bonds across the pond

Friday eve means the weekend's just around the corner,?but it seems like nobody told the British bond market. I'm your host, Phil Rosen, and boy do we have action to sort through today.?

Here's the TLDR of today's newsletter: The Bank of England is in a pickle because it's trying to ease and tighten its monetary policy at the same time.?

It's a tricky, unusual situation. The balancing act, at worst, could mean a calamity for the British economy and prolonged volatility in markets.?

And at best, policymakers thread the needle and stabilize markets, tame inflation, and regain the confidence of traders and everyday folks dealing with a tough economy.??

Let's break it down.?

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1. The Bank of England announced Wednesday?that it would snap up as many UK?government bonds?— "gilts" — as needed in order to stabilize debt markets, as well as delaying the start date of its bond sales.?

The decision to intervene followed the?pound's drop to a record-low Monday, and a significant rise in yields on gilts, all in response to a dramatic, debt-funded tax-cut proposal.?

Remember Econ 101? A weaker currency means imports get more expensive, and higher bond yields mean?government borrowing?gets more expensive.?

So, the bank decided it wouldn't allow yields to climb to the point where they caused a?credit crunch, making it impossible for households or businesses to take out loans.?

After it said it would make temporary purchases of gilts?until October 14 at "whatever scale necessary," the yield on the UK 10-year bonds did fall 43 basis points to 4.08%, after closing at 4.51% on Tuesday.?

"The Bank of England is facing a very, very difficult dilemma right now," Christoph Schon, senior director of applied research at?Qontigo, told me on the phone from London yesterday. "The bank wants to quiet down markets and stabilize credit conditions in the UK."

Schon added that the volatility has made forecasting all but impossible, and that the bank is deploying two opposing forces simultaneously.?

"There's a lot of concern and confusion,"?he said. "Really, there's almost no trust in the prime minister and the Chancellor."

The UK's bond-buying spree is quantitative easing, which usually is how banks stimulate economies via injecting more liquidity into them, as?Insider's Theron Mohamed writes.?

It can, however, stoke inflation, which goes against the BoE's rate-hiking cycle which aims to bring down inflation.?

The intervention effectively undermines the bank's attempts to tighten monetary policy, as?one program is expansionary and the other is contractionary.?

"In the same day, we've had rate hikes being priced in and out of the market," Schon said. "It's extremely volatile right now, and it's hard to trust any predictions."

What will it take for bond market traders to regain confidence in the UK debt market? Let us know in the comments.

In other news:

2. This batch of high-quality stocks are poised to outperform as a volatile market sends the eurozone barreling toward a recession.?Raging inflation, rate hikes, and an energy crisis have hurt European stocks recently.?But UBS picked out 23 names that can weather the economic downturn and help investors navigate increasing volatility and risk.?

3. Jeremy Grantham and four other money managers shared their top strategies for navigating a bear market in stocks.?When the going gets tough in financial markets, it can be hard to know the safest places to invest your money and where to get the best returns.?Here's what some of Wall Street's top experts had to say.?

4. Stifel's stock chief shared four places to put your money now as an "immediate window" for returns opens up even as stocks hit a near-term bottom.?Barry Bannister said inflation is slowing fast enough that the Fed will announce a data-dependent pause by early next year —?and that the S&P 500 could climb back to 4,400 before another sell-off and recession.

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5. Apple stock dropped Wednesday on reports the company nixed plans to increase iPhone 14 production as demand slows.?Bloomberg reported that the anticipated surge in buyers hasn't taken shape, and?Apple suppliers could cut back assembly of the latest iPhone series by as many as 6 million units in the second half of 2022.

This is a condensed version of Insider’s 10 Things Before the Opening Bell newsletter. To see items 6-10, sign up here to receive the full newsletter in your inbox.

Plus, Insider has a wide array of industry-specific newsletters — see them all here.

And keep up with the latest markets news throughout your day by checking out The Refresh from Insider, a dynamic audio news brief from the Insider newsroom. Listen here.

This newsletter was curated by Phil Rosen.

Andreas Diemer

Einfach bessere Investments | Unabh?ngiger Finanzexperte | Honorarberater

2 年

Was dieser alarmierende Bericht und die Aussage, ich zitiere: "The Bank of England is facing a very, very difficult dilemma right now," Christoph Schon, senior director of applied research at?Qontigo, told me on the phone from London yesterday. "The bank wants to quiet down markets and stabilize credit conditions in the UK." für Auswirkungen auf die Weltm?rkte hat, das werden wir in den n?chsten Monaten erfahren... ??

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Param Desai

CEO @ Valiant Entech | CFA Level 2 cleared (90th percentile, both levels)

2 年

Exciting news. First central bank to consider pivoting amongst Quantitative tightening by other banks- shall be interesting to see how this impacts their inflation crisis.

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Karin Ward

Attorney Advisor at Social Security Administration (SSA)

2 年

The issues regarding weaker or stronger currency can be problematic or opportunistic depending upon what the country and what its citizens need. For the British manufacturing sector a weaker pound might make their goods cheaper which could be to their advantage. In the USA the dollar is strengthening which means it's easier to buy goods overseas but it makes our manufacturing products less attractive because they'll be more expensive.? It's just depends.?

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I have been reading your post now for a while and it is good reading and insight

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Warami B.

Engineering Manager| Product Management | AI & Nocode Advocate | Podcast Host

2 年

It will take time for BMT to regain confidence.

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