The Economy and Bond Market Radar (July 30, 2012)

 

The Economy and Bond Market Radar (July 30, 2012)

After hitting a new low on Tuesday, Treasury yields bounced back sharply on Friday as ECB president Mario Draghi vowed to do whatever it takes to save the euro. This news sparked a “risk on” rally driving risky assets higher and bond prices lower. Yields on Spanish 10-year government bonds reversed course and dropped sharply on the news as it appears the likelihood of a sovereign default has diminished.

Spanish 10-Tear Bond Yields

Strengths

  • In addition to the ECB news discussed above, there was a front page story in the Wall Street Journal earlier this week that was widely believed to be leaked from the Fed to prep the market for potential Fed policy actions as soon as next week. Monetary policy-makers are taking action around the globe.
  • Second quarter GDP grew 1.5 percent. While this is a slow level of absolute growth, it modestly beat expectations.
  • Several homebuilding companies reported earnings this week which indicated orders in the second quarter were very robust.

Weaknesses

  • June durable goods orders ex-transportation fell 1.1 percent, indicating broad-based weakness.
  • The U.K. economy contracted by 0.7 percent in the second quarter, while Mexico’s economy shrank by 0.36 percent in May.
  • Markit’s July eurozone manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) fell to the lowest level since June 2009. The more traditional PMI reports will be released next week, but the indications obviously look weak.

Opportunity

  • The Fed and ECB are both talking about additional monetary stimulus. Interest rates are likely to remain very low for the foreseeable future.

Threat

  • Europe remains a wildcard with the markets shifting focus on a weekly basis.
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