Summary
- Fed holds, cuts deferred: In May, the Fed stood pat, leaning on robust hard data over softer survey readings. As the Fed is waiting for more clarity on developments in unemployment and inflation, we are delaying our expectation of two rate cuts this year until September and December. We anticipate a further two cuts in 2026 and a terminal Fed funds rate of 3.5%.
- ECB easing: Core inflation is moving towards the 2% target, driven by slowing wage growth and a stronger euro. We have moved from expecting one cut (in June) to two (in June and July), taking the deposit rate to 1.75%—the bottom of the ECB’s neutral range.
- Safe-haven rate recalibration: In April, the shock of the tariffs sent German Bund yields sharply lower, in contrast to the steadier performance of US Treasuries. Since then, both 10-year Bund and Treasury yields have rebounded amid hopes of a US–China deal. We remain positive on safe and liquid core EU, US and UK government bonds. Our 12-month yield targets remain unchanged: 4.25% in the US, 2.50% in Germany, and 4.00% in the UK.
- Topic in focus: Did April rattle the markets? The widening of credit spreads in IG and HY in early April was swiftly erased, as was the widening of EM bonds. We remain cautious: valuations are tight against slowing growth and sticky inflation. We are focusing on high-quality, liquid credits and monitoring Q2 earnings alongside CCC spreads for signs of stress.
- Opportunities in Fixed Income: In addition to core eurozone, US and UK government bonds, we are Positive on US Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities, US TIPS, and eurozone and UK investment grade corporate bonds.