GERMANY: Fitch: Pressure On AAA Rating Could Arise Absent Growth Improvements

Mar-18 14:56

Fitch Ratings write that although “Germany has substantial fiscal headroom to accommodate the planned major shift to much larger military and infrastructure spending”, pressure on its AAA/Stable rating “could arise over the longer term if this spending increase is not eventually offset by consolidation measures or a lasting improvement in growth prospects”.

  • The Bundestag vote on incoming Chacellor Merz’s fiscal reforms is currently ongoing, with the Bundesrat vote due on Friday March 21. Fitch expect the bill to be passed “broadly as envisaged”.
  • Fitch pencil in “EUR900 billion-1 trillion (21%-23% of 2024 GDP) of additional government expenditure over the next decade”, with new spending expected to be scaled up gradually.
  • Under this assumption, Germany's debt-to-GDP ratio would approach 70% by 2027, the highest among ‘AAA’ rated peers (median at 36.5%), but still below the 80% peak of 2010. Germany's status as the eurozone’s benchmark issuer and its large, diversified economy also enhance its debt-carrying capacity”.
  • “Our initial estimate is that the new spending could directly add on average about 0.4pp to GDP in 2025-2027, but we expect higher US tariffs to offset this in 2025 and forecast growth of just 0.1%”…. “However, fiscal stimulus will allow the German economy to recover modestly next year, when we forecast growth of 1.1%”.
  • “Germany faces significant structural challenges, including rising competition from China, tariff risks due to its export-oriented economy, and competitiveness issues in the manufacturing sector caused by increased energy and labour costs, bureaucratic hurdles, and high corporate taxes”… “he additional spending will support growth and enhance competitiveness, but it is unlikely to substantially improve Germany's longer-term growth prospects in isolation”.

Historical bullets

US TSYS: Yields Pull Back Again With Consumer Growth Story In Question

Feb-14 21:08

Treasuries outperformed global counterparts Friday, fully completing a reversal from a midweek selloff.

  • A large miss in January retail sales (-0.9% M/M vs 0.7% prior, -0.2% consensus) represented the biggest sequential drop in 22 months, with a similarly weak "control group" figure leading to a 0.5pp downgrade to the Atlanta Fed's GDP nowcast (to 2.3% GDP growth in Q1, i.e. no acceleration from Q4).
  • That was enough to see the 10Y Treasury yield drop 7bp in the subsequent half hour, continuing the downtrend seen beginning in the immediate aftermath of Wednesday's hot CPI release. 10Y yields dropped over 21bp from the Wednesday high to Thursday's low, ultimately ending a tumultuous week 1.5bp lower.
  • Yields ticked a little higher in afternoon trade Friday but the curve leaned bull steeper on the day, with the belly outperforming: 2-Yr yield is down 4.6bps at 4.261%, 5-Yr is down 5.7bps at 4.3328%, 10-Yr is down 5.1bps at 4.4782%, and 30-Yr is down 3.9bps at 4.6982%.
  • In futures: Mar 10-Yr futures (TY) up 9/32  at 109-08 (L: 108-26 / H: 109-15.5).
  • Other data (industrial production mixed, import prices soft) had little lasting impact.
  • The coming week’s data schedule is relatively light, due in part to Monday’s Presidents Day holiday (SIFMA recommends bond cash close, equities closed), with initial jobless claims, February prelim PMIs, and regional Fed manufacturing surveys among the highlights. Supply includes 20Y Bond and 30Y TIPS auctions.
  • We also get plenty of Fed communications including the January meeting minutes, and speaking appearances by both doves (Gov Waller) and hawks (St Louis Pres Musalem).

USDCAD TECHS: Bear Cycle Extends

Feb-14 21:00
  • RES 4: 1.4948 High Mar 2003
  • RES 3: 1.4814 High Apr 2003 
  • RES 2: 1.4503/1.4793 High Fb 4 / 3 and key resistance
  • RES 1: 1.4380 High Feb 10     
  • PRICE: 1.4175 @ 16:54 GMT Feb 14
  • SUP 1: 1.4107 50.0% retracement of the Sep 25 ‘24 - Feb 3 bull cycle
  • SUP 2: 1.4011 Low Dec 5 ‘24
  • SUP 3: 1.3944 61.8% retracement of the Sep 25 ‘24 - Feb 3 bull cycle
  • SUP 4: 1.3894 Low Nov 11 ‘24

USDCAD broke lower Thursday, breaking out of a tight trading range this week and remains soft. A key support at 1.4261, the Jan 20 low, has been cleared and this signals scope for an extension of the current bear cycle - a correction. Scope is seen for a move towards 1.4107, a Fibonacci retracement. Initial firm resistance to watch is 1.4380, the Feb 10 high. A break would highlight an early bullish reversal signal. 

OPTIONS: Mixed SOFR Rates Trade To Cap Week

Feb-14 20:47

Friday's US rates/bond options flow included:

  • SFRH5 95.62p, traded half in 2k.
  • SFRH5 96.93c, traded 0.25 in 4k.
  • SFRH5 95.75/95.62ps 1x2, Traded 3.75 in 3k.
  • SFRK5 97.00c, traded for 0.75 and 1 in 3k.
  • SFRU5 95.93/95.81/95.68p fly, traded 1 in 1.5k
  • SFRU5 96.50c, traded for 6.5 in 1.5k.
  • SFRU5 95.87^, traded for 36 in 5k.
  • SFRJ5 95.87/95.75/95.68p fly 1x3x2 with SFRK5 95.81/95.68/95.62p ladder 1x3x2, bought for 10 in 2k.
  • SFRM5 95.68p, sold at 2.5 in 10k.
  • 0QH5 96.00c, bought for 13 in 3k.
  • TYH5 107p, bought for 11 in 15k
  • TYJ5 107p, bought for 11 in 17k total.
  • TYJ5 107/106ps, bought for 7 in 15k total.