Big European investors bet against swings in ECB, Bank of England rate expectations

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
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LONDON, March 10 (Reuters) - Big European investors are pushing back against sharp bond market swings that have upended expectations for central bank rate cuts, arguing ​they have gone too far even if surging energy prices raise inflation risks.

Amundi, ‌Europe's largest asset manager, has bought short-dated British and Italian government bonds and Allianz Global Investors added to a position favouring longer-dated UK bonds, senior fund managers told Reuters on Tuesday.

A surge in energy prices since the U.S.-Israeli war ​against Iran has rekindled inflation fears. At one point on Monday, as oil surged towards $120 ​a barrel traders briefly priced in a high chance of a Bank of ⁠England rate hike this year. Before the war they had bet on a cut this month.

In an ​equally rapid U-turn on Tuesday, traders went back to pricing a 50% chance of a cut by ​year-end as oil prices dropped.

Traders priced as many as two 2026 rate hikes from the European Central Bank on Monday, having priced a sizeable chance of a cut just last month. They were last pricing around a 70% chance of ​one rate rise by December.

"It's too early for central banks to act. So, we tend to fade ​this short term. If the market is pricing hikes like it is, I think it's a good value proposition," ‌said Gregoire ⁠Pesques, chief investment officer of global fixed income at Amundi, which manages 2.4 trillion euros ($2.79 trillion).

Pesques echoed a view from many investors that the moves have been exacerbated by traders unwinding pre-war positions that were bullish on bonds.

Inflation fears have hit UK and euro zone government bonds hard given Europe's reliance on ​energy imports. Interest-rate sensitive ​two-year yields have risen ⁠around 30 bps in Britain and Germany as bond prices have tumbled.

That makes short-dated bonds attractive, said Pesques, who has added UK two-year paper. He ​is also buying two-year Italian bonds and selling 30-year debt.

Ranjiv Mann, a ​senior portfolio manager ⁠at Allianz Global Investors, said he added to a position favouring 30-year British relative to U.S. Treasuries last week. He believes the BoE will still cut rates in 2026.

"Clearly, in the short term, markets are questioning ⁠some of ​that (Bank of England rates) pricing, but we think the underlying ​backdrop still remains supportive for gilts relative to other markets," Mann told Reuters on Tuesday, also citing a weakening labour market, easing ​inflation and tight fiscal policy.

Reporting by Yoruk Bahceli and Amanda Cooper; editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Karin Strohecker

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