Bunds: Energy shock mix shapes ECB path – ABN AMRO

ABN AMRO’s Senior Fixed Income Strategist Larissa de Barros Fritz analyzes how different Oil and Gas shocks affect ECB expectations and Bund yields. She notes that demand-driven Oil shocks, speculative inventory moves, and supply disruptions each have distinct rate and curve impacts. Gas supply shocks are seen as more inflationary and persistent, gradually embedding a Gas premium into Bund yields over time.

Different energy shocks, different Bund paths

"Oil shocks that are demand‑driven push rates sharply higher, while inventory (speculative) oil shocks trigger flight‑to‑quality declines."

"Oil supply shocks raise inflation and thus ECB expectations, but the accompanying growth drag limits the magnitude of longer‑term yield increases."

"Gas supply shocks are more inflationary and persistent than oil shocks, creating a stronger “gas premium” in Bund yields over time."

"Gas shocks initially cause muted or slightly negative Bund yield reactions due to slow inflation pass‑through, before driving a sustained rise in both short‑ and long‑term yields."

"Current market dynamics suggest an oil-led supply shock dominates, implying short‑term bear‑flattening followed by potential bear‑steepening as gas‑driven inflation slowly materializes."

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Fed: Powell set to delay cuts – ING

ING’s Benjamin Schroeder expects the Federal Reserve (Fed) to keep rates unchanged at its March FOMC meeting as higher Oil prices and elevated inflation expectations constrain policy. He notes markets see no cut today, with the first reduction only fully priced by year-end.
Read more Previous

USD/CAD eases as BoC holds rates, Fed decision in focus

USD/CAD trims part of its earlier gains on Wednesday as the Canadian Dollar (CAD) finds some support following the Bank of Canada’s (BoC) monetary policy announcement.
Read more Next