
Could Fiscal Stimulus Inflate Expectations?
Given where asset prices are at the moment, we would categorise inflation as a low probability, but high impact, risk.

Johnson Clears Path to Fiscal Stimulus
Next month’s budget now has the green light to be Johnson’s fiscal bazooka, with tax cuts, housing schemes and infrastructure projects already mooted.

Which Central Bank Blinks First?
After a year of over 100 rate cuts around the world in 2019, we felt that 2020 would see major central banks engage wait-and-see mode.

This Is No Time for Additional Alpha
This deal may well perform in the short-term, and we sincerely hope Alpha’s plan works, but we also recognise there is a high degree of execution risk and the domestic economy still has considerable headwinds.

Treasuries Offering Good Virus Protection
Perfect timing is practically impossible in situations like these, but one way to tackle this risk is to gradually reduce ‘good’ duration by moving to the shorter part of the UST curve, which would be less sensitive to a move higher in yields.

A Fond Farewell to the Unreliable Boyfriend?
In what was Mark Carney’s last meeting as governor of the Bank, the MPC delivered a mixed message.

Slo-mo CLOs Could See Spreads Tighten
Given the material positive performance seen in other parts of the fixed income markets in 2019, the CLO relative value proposition now looks even more attractive.

The BoE Should Wait and See
A rate cut now makes very little sense to us, and wastes one of the few bullets the BoE has left in its armoury. If they do decide to cut next week, we think it will be reversed within 12 months.

Margin For Error in Credit Selection Narrows
We have talked regularly about avoiding ‘next year’s skeletons’, and this is now more pertinent given the strength of the current technical backdrop, combined with spread levels that are significantly tighter relative to this time last year.

ABS Primary Slips Into Gear
We have already highlighted the blistering pace of bond sales in both Europe and the US, and this being met with apparently insatiable demand from fixed income investors. Since European ABS markets tend to lag broader fixed income, it seems fitting that we have had to wait another week before seeing that primary machine start to accelerate.

Record Inflows Give New Energy to US Bond Market
While the European bond market was setting records last week, the US market has also begun 2020 with a flurry of transactions backed up by record inflows.

Heavy Supply Meets Heavy Demand
Kicking off the new year, we expected the new issue market to be very active and we certainly haven’t been disappointed, with the good momentum created at the end of last year – thanks to the US and China reaching a ‘phase one’ agreement and the resounding victory by the Conservatives paving the way for Brexit negotiations to move forward – allowing pent-up borrowing demand to hit the market.
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