HALISTER1: BI Europe Financial Policy Tracker Key Events: Article 50 Fiasco

BI Europe Financial Policy Tracker Key Events: Article 50 Fiasco

Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BI (Bloomberg Intelligence)

Tickers
CS FP (AXA SA)
ALV GR (Allianz SE)
AV/ LN (Aviva PLC)
BLK US (BlackRock Inc)
PRU LN (Prudential PLC)

People
Theresa May (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland)

Topics
BI Analysis

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UUID: 7947283

HALISTER1: EU RATES ROUNDUP: Turning Short EUR Front-End Heading Into ECB

EU RATES ROUNDUP: Turning Short EUR Front-End Heading Into ECB

(Bloomberg) -- Analysts focus on the ECB, with many highlighting risks for the front-end.
  • Citigroup recommend hedging via Euribor options, Barclays prefer reds/greens EONIA steepeners, while Deutsche Bank enter short 3Y fwd 2Y eonia
  • Citigroup (strategists including Harvinder Sian)
    • Strategic view is that the peak in Euro HICP for this year has been seen, expect core HICP to flat-line near 1%, motivating a trend decline in 5y5y breakevens (target 1.40%)
      • Risk is that staff HICP projections get less benign on sharper output gap narrowing
      • Already look for wind-down of QE in 2018, perhaps the compromise in 2017 will be to tweak the depo rate marginally higher given it will help bank profitability, prevent deeper losses on PSPP buying
    • Recommend buying Euribor Sept. 2017 1y mid-curve 99.875 puts paying 2.5c (delta 13%) to hedge risk of election upset in France, possible ECB changes to HICP forecast: MORE
    • Remain long Bobl spreads, see risk that ECB will get more generous on the cash-for-collateral facility, though unlikely to happen in near term as the ECB will be aware of SNB buying as well as other factors responsible for driving 2y yields
  • Barclays (strategists including Cagdas Aksu)
    • ECB is likely to keep its dovish bias with the risk that it tones it down; recommend closing long Bund ASW vs EONIA, with ASW close to all-time wides, no longer fundamentally cheap
      • Scope for tightening, possibly a less-dovish ECB tone, capital ratio deviation, or a mention around repo issues
    • Initiate reds/greens EONIA steepeners; curve has little term premium at around 11.5bps given the improving backdrop for the euro-area economy
      • Longer-dated EONIA can build more relative term premium associated with better growth and inflation outlook, end of Draghi’s term in late 2019 and Fed policy outlook
    • Holding onto our short 10y Spain and Austria vs Germany trades; keep long-end periphery curve steepening in 10s30s Ireland based on macro backdrop and credit risk premium arguments
  • Morgan Stanley (strategists including Anton Heese)
    • The implication of higher UST yields, with the Fed now expected to hike in March, is for a steeper euro curve
      • Expect collateral scarcity issues, exacerbated by euro political risk concerns, to keep 5y and shorter-maturity German paper well-anchored; continue to recommend bund 5s30s steepeners
    • In the U.K., growth data has come in weaker than expected, reducing the likelihood of the MPC raising rates for the foreseeable future
      • Continue to hold 2s5s gilt flatteners, which has a very clear long duration bias; recommend the trade as a way to reflect expectation that the MPC is likely to keep rates lower than the market currently prices
  • BofAML (strategists including Ralf Preusser)
    • Any change to the ECB’s statement on rates remaining “at present or lower levels” would see the 1-3y part of the OIS curve most susceptible to a sell-off; don’t believe the ECB will extend their TLTROs next week
    • Clarification from the ECB that this will be the final TLTRO should imply a very large take-up at the March 23 operation, as this will be the banks’ last opportunity to obtain cheap 4y funding at rates
      • As a result, ahead of LTRO look for outperformance of 4-5y point on the swap curve, widening in 3s6s basis (4-5y sector), after LTRO look for widening in FRA-OIS, some support for the periphery
    • In the U.K., budget to result in reduced supply relative to expectations, would be most beneficial for long-dated conventional Gilts; budget will be perceived as less austere, which may have a mildly bearish impact on the front-end
      • Taken together, this suggests broad curve flattening
  • Deutsche Bank (strategists including Francis Yared)
    • Market pricing of the Fed remains too benign, both the terminal rate and the term premium remain too low
      • As political risk is receding, the ECB should slowly but surely acknowledge that the data is supportive of a reduction in the stimulus later this year
      • Don’t expect any significant changes from the ECB at its meeting next week; greater chance of a removal of the “lower” element in the forward guidance on policy rates rather than removing the bias for increasing the pace of QE
      • Enter a new short 3Y fwd 2Y eonia as the market has scope to reprice the money market curve
      • Maintain bearish bias on the front-end of France (3Y) and Italy (5Y)
  • JPMorgan (strategists including Gianluca Salford)
    • Bias for higher German yields in the short and long term given continued decline in maturity of purchases, risk ECB tweaks forward guidance bearishly, continued tightening of intra-EMU spreads, which may prompt more unwinds of long Bund hedges, developments in U.S. rates
      • Wait for a pullback to re-enter shorts at the long end; bias for steeper 2s10s and 10s30s curves but currently unattractive entry levels
      • Stopped out of longs in Schatz last week; barring dramatically new information on the ECB reaction function, consider re-entering longs in Schatz in the -80/-75bps area, targeting a move toward -90bps
    • Intra-EMU spreads are reacting to reduced political risk; template of Brexit and Italian vote and fair value models suggest there is room for further tightening
      • Recommend 10s30s France steepeners vs Germany as a cheap way to position for a continuation of tightening
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

Tickers
2539Z GR (European Central Bank)

People
Harvinder Sian (Citigroup Inc)
Anton Heese (Morgan Stanley)
Cagdas Aksu (Barclays PLC)
Francis Yared (Deutsche Bank AG)
Gianluca Salford (JPMorgan Chase & Co)

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UUID: 7947283

HALISTER1: India Bonds See Fresh Short Positions on Repo Borrowing: Traders

India Bonds See Fresh Short Positions on Repo Borrowing: Traders

(Bloomberg) -- Fresh short positions are being initiated in Indian bonds as 2026 debt is once again available for borrowing in the repo market after a brief absence last week, Mumbai-based traders say.
  • Repo funding rate for 7.59% 2026 and 6.97% 2026 bonds rise to 3% Monday; rate slid to near zero levels last week as banks were unwilling to part with these securities due to year-end factors
  • Total traded amount for 7.59% 2026 bond was 15b rupees and 6.97% 2026 bond at 12.15b rupees in repo market Monday: CCIL
  • Yield on 6.97% 2026 bonds up 9bps to 6.86%
  • Yield on 7.59% 2026 bonds rises 8bps to 7.05%
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

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UUID: 7947283

HALISTER1: INDIA RATINGS: Massimo Enterprise, Shree Shyam Sponge Cut

INDIA RATINGS: Massimo Enterprise, Shree Shyam Sponge Cut

(Bloomberg) -- Here’s a roundup of Indian co. debt-rating changes.
  • To get this story sent to your inbox real-time, run NI INRATINGS , click on Display & Edit, then Set Alert Delivery
DOWNGRADES
  • Massimo Enterprise
    • Fund-based limits cut to B from B+ at ICRA
    • Cites significant market risk for the project
  • Shree Shyam Sponge
    • Fund-based limits cut to BB- from BB at ICRA
    • Cites significant scaledown in operations
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

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UUID: 7947283

HALISTER1: Buy Local China, Indian Bonds Before They Mainstream: HSBC Asset

Buy Local China, Indian Bonds Before They Mainstream: HSBC Asset

(Bloomberg) -- Global investors should consider buying bonds of domestic Chinese and Indian markets to boost risk-adjusted returns before investing in both markets becomes more common, according to Geoff Lunt, senior fixed-income product specialist at HSBC Global Asset Management, in a report.
  • China and India now account for 0% of GBI-EM, Citi WGBI and “tiny” exposure in Barclays Global Agg index: report
  • “Both markets are similar in structure to those more familiar to global investors,” Lunt
    • Sovereign bonds are issued across the yield curve with also spread products in quasi-sovereign, state-backed undertakings and corporate bonds available
    • Liquidity in the sovereign markets is generally good, given the large size and trading volumes
  • Lunt points out that both markets “are not well correlated to the global risk appetite which can result in wholesale allocation away from emerging markets during times of stress”
    • “Both have independent and uncorrelated interest rate cycles, which can add to the stability of returns of a global portfolio over time”
  • Comparatively higher yields, the potential inclusion of China bond market into global fixed-income indexes, and Indian government’s push for supply side reform are also reasons to increase allocations in these two bond markets: Lunt
    • Sees around $150b of demand for China’s onshore bond market once it gets included into main global indexes
Alert: HALISTER1
Source: BFW (Bloomberg First Word)

Tickers
HSBA LN (HSBC Holdings PLC)

People
Geoffrey Lunt (HSBC Global Asset Mgmt)
Geoff Lunt (HSBC Global Asset Management Hong Kong Ltd/HK)

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UUID: 7947283