ISM Services for July also Hints at Slowing Economy
Treasury yields are listlessly ticking higher but it’s more about flows and positioning for the 10yr auction than any new catalyst. The Treasury will sell $42 billion in 10yr notes today and that should keep yields on a short leash until past the 1pm ET announcement. Meanwhile, President Trump has said he will announce a…
Jobs Report and Personnel Fallout to Continue this Week
Treasury yields continue to drift lower in the wake of the weak jobs report and the personnel changes that are coming. The data flow slows considerably this week opening centerstage for DC theatrics to keep markets focused on work instead of the waning days of summer. As mentioned, economic releases will be few, but following…
July Jobs Report Misses and Big Downward Revisions Makes it Worse
July nonfarm payrolls rose only 73 thousand, missing the 105 thousand expected but slightly ahead of the 14 thousand increase in June (significantly revised lower from an initial 147 thousand increase). Speaking of revisions, May was revised down by 125 thousand jobs bringing two-month revisions to an astounding 258 thousand. Private sector job growth was…
As Expected, Fed Keeps Rates Unchanged but Notes Moderating Growth
Meeting Highlights As expected, the Fed kept the funds rate range unchanged at 4.25% – 4.50%, with two Fed governors dissenting (Waller and Bowman). The double dissent from governors is the first since 1993. Truth be known, It’s not really surprising the pair dissented as they’ve been increasingly vocal about cutting now, and it does…
2nd Quarter GDP Precedes FOMC Announcement
Treasury yields are trading a bit higher after this morning’s new data headlined by 2nd Quarter GDP coming in at 3.0% beating most estimates, but with some nagging questions. A reversal of the 1st quarter import surge led to the rebound. As we march through the thicket of first-tier data on offer this week, the…
Trade Deal with Japan has Markets in Risk-on Mood
The week of light data rolls on but at least we have trade deals to talk about. The announced deal between Japan and the US on tariffs has markets in a risk-on mood and that has Treasuries on the back foot, but after a five-day rally in 10yr notes a little breather can be expected….
Bond Portfolio Trends: Second Quarter 2025
Bond Portfolio Trends: Second Quarter 2025 Background Beginning in May 2012, we started tracking portfolio trends of our bond accounting customers here at SouthState|DuncanWilliams. At present, we account for over 130 client portfolios with a combined book value of $12.3 billion (not including SouthState Bank’s portfolio), or $95 million on average per portfolio. Twelve months…
Quiet Data Week Puts Focus on Powell Saga
It’s a light data week and with the Fed going quiet prior to their FOMC meeting next week we’ll be subjected to the whims of the White House and the saga of Powell’s status as Fed Chair. For now, markets are quiet with a slight risk-on tone to start the week. Dow futures are indicated…
Waller Roots for July Rate Cut, Again
Fed Governor Waller was at it again in a Thursday evening address outlining his views for a rate cut at the upcoming July FOMC meeting. That has markets modestly bull-steepening in response, and while the “cut now” remarks are nothing new from Waller, he did add more meat to the bone for his thinking and…
CPI Results Stoke Tariff Cost Fears
Cooler PPI numbers this morning have slowed the upward push in Treasury yields. While headline PPI was unchanged, beating the 0.1% expectation, it was more mixed in the internals. The goods side did see price increases that were offset at the headline level by weaker service prices, which may reflect softening demand (for example, travel…
Mid-Summer Inflation Week Arrives
Treasuries are taking weekend developments in stride this morning which has been the tendency of late, but the question always lurks, for how much longer? Japanese long bond yields rose again, talk of 30% tariffs on Mexico, Canada, and possibly the EU, have been threatened and criticism against Powell over Fed HQ renovations only seems…
June Jobs Report Beats Expectations, but Trouble Lurks Below the Surface
June nonfarm payrolls rose 147 thousand, easily beating the 110 thousand expected and slightly ahead of the 144 thousand in May (revised up from an initial 139 thousand). Speaking of revisions, April was revised up by 11 thousand jobs bringing two-month revisions higher by 16 thousand. Private sector job growth was 74 thousand which was…