U.S. yields near 3-year high, euro stronger after French
election
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[April 11, 2022] By
Samuel Indyk
LONDON (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury yields
rose to multi-year highs on Monday, while the euro strengthened and the
spread between French and German bond yields narrowed after French
President Emmanuel Macron won a larger than expected vote share in
Sunday's election.
With 97% of the votes counted for Sunday's presidential election first
round, Macron garnered 27.6% of the votes and far-right candidate Marine
Le Pen won 23.4%. Macron will now go into a runoff against Le Pen on
April 24.
A Le Pen victory could send shockwaves through France and Europe in ways
similar to Britain's vote in 2016 to leave the European Union (EU).
The first round result saw Macron record a bigger lead than he managed
in 2017, leaving the euro 0.4% higher on the day at $1.0915, after it
initially rose to $1.0955 overnight then fell to $1.0874.
The French 10-year bond yield was slightly higher at 1.286%, after
hitting its highest level since July 2015 at 1.309% in early European
hours.
The spread between the French 10-year yield and its German peer narrowed
by over 5 basis points (bps) to 48.9 bps.
"While Macron's first round lead over Le Pen was bigger than he managed
in 2017, polls point to a much narrower race for the second round
(53-47%)," Danske Bank analysts said in a note.
"With Macron's re-election far from assured, markets will keep a close
eye on polls in the coming two weeks."
The mood in equity markets was cautious with the MSCI world equity
index, which tracks shares in 50 countries, lower by 0.2%.
The pan-European STOXX 600 was lower by 0.4%, but outperformance was
seen in France's CAC 40, which rose 0.7%.
U.S. equity futures were lower, with S&P eminis down 0.4%, Nasdaq 100
eminis down 0.8% and Dow Jones eminis down 0.1%.
"You have to have a bias to the market overall – the bias in our mind is
negative because of this combination of slowing growth, higher inflation
and higher yields, tighter financial conditions," said Hani Redha,
multi-asset portfolio manager at Pinebridge Investments.
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The weakness in markets on Monday could be particularly attributed to the
continued sell-off in U.S. Treasuries and Europe's government bonds, he added.
Ten-year Treasury yields rose as high as 2.7840% during Asia-Pacific trading
hours, the highest level since January 2019, for a 125 basis point rise so far
this year. Bond yields move inversely with prices.
With the Federal Reserve not set to hold a monetary policy until May, Redha
believes U.S. yields will continue moving in an upward direction
"This is the kind of path of least resistance right now," he said.
Markets have raced to price in the risk of larger rate hikes from the Federal
Reserve with futures implying rises of 50 basis points at both the May and June
meetings.
This underlines the importance of the March U.S. consumer price report on
Tuesday where the median forecast is for a leap of 1.2%, taking annual inflation
to an eye-watering 8.5%.
China's inflation figures surprised on the high side on Monday although were
still relatively modest at 1.5% year-on-year in March.
But that still saw yields on China's ten-year government bonds fall below U.S.
Treasury yields for the first time in 12 years on Monday.
Title: Us-China,
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/myvmnqlakpr/us-china.JPG
Oil prices were lower on plans to release record volumes of crude from strategic
stocks and as Chinese lockdowns continued. [nL2N2W9023]
Brent crude futures were trading lower by 2.3% at $100.45 per barrel and U.S.
crude futures were down 2.5% at $95.83 per barrel.
Gold edged higher to $1,958 an ounce, adding to its 1.1% gain last week.
(Reporting by Samuel Indyk, Elizabeth Howcroft and Wayne Cole; editing by
Philippa Fletcher and Angus MacSwan)
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