Good morning
We wrote about 10-year German swap spreads turning negative for the first time in history
What's driving it and why it matters 🧵
ifre.com/story/4954876/…
Conventional wisdom holds government bonds trade at a premium to swap bc of the higher credit risk facing a bank as swap counterparty
But market dynamics play an important role too
US and UK swap spreads first dipped below zero in the aftermath of the 2008 crisis
German bunds proved immune to these pressures thank to a chronic shortage of these securities
1) Germany keeping a tight rein on spending constrained bond supply
and 2) the ECB was buying huge amounts of bonds
Remember stories like this?
wsj.com/articles/ecb-f…
Fast forward a few years and everything has changed
Inflation has forced central banks to tighten policy and start to unwind QE
And governments have had to loosen the purse strings
In Germany, this triggered the collapse of its ruling coalition
politico.eu/article/german…
That means more debt issuance when buyers are stepping back - and not just the ECB
Also sovereign wealth funds + bank treasuries (who are nursing paper losses on bond holdings)
Meanwhile, hedging demand remains high from pensions + corporates, pushing swap rates down
Traders report other factors driving swap spreads
Most notably: changing dynamics in repo markets as Bunds become more readily available
Some are concerned these tensions could deter would-be buyers of government bonds
Overall, negative swap spreads underline how we're in a new era for government debt w/ wider fiscal deficits + tighter monetary policy
It's no coincidence that US and UK swap spreads have also become more negative since Donald Trump's election victory earlier this month //
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