Summary
- All eyes on oil prices: Investors are pricing out the chance of a very gradual oil price normalization. That remains a key indicator for optimism and risk appetite (see chart of the month).
- The Fed feels the heat: After the job report, the Fed faces growing a pressure to address inflation risks. The next move will depend on two key factors: the trajectory of unemployment and the stability of inflation expectations. At this stage, we expect the Fed to remain on hold this year.
- ECB hiked as largely expected: The ECB, operating under a stricter inflation-targeting framework raised its policy rate in June 2026 to counter inflationary pressures. We expect a wait-and-see approach thereafter.
- Opportunities in core eurozone govies as long as the 10-year Bund remains above 3%: Positive stance on core eurozone govies. We favour maturities of 7-10 years.
- Positive opinion on UK bonds: Yields fell back after the political pressure started to come down. We keep a positive stance on UK government bonds. We keep our target on the 10-year UK government bond yield at 4.30%.
- Selective opportunities in corporate bonds: We prefer EUR and GBP IG corporate bonds (Positive view) over USD IG bonds (Neutral view).
- We keep a negative stance on corporate high yield bonds. For fallen angels as well as rising stars, we keep a neutral view: Yield spreads remain very low and do not remunerate for the underlying risks.
- Too early to come back on EM Bonds: The three primary drivers—valuation, currency outlook, and monetary policy expectations— are not supportive. We need to monitor the developments in the Middle-East and the expected re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz.
Writing completed on 11 June 2026