Improving risk-adjusted carry in intra-EMU spreads is deceptive, driven by falling volatility, not higher returns. This creates a 'carry trap' where a small one-standard-deviation widening can erase one to two months of gains, highlighting the risk in currently crowded positions.
A modest sell-off in UK gilts, triggered by news of a potential parliamentary path for a mayoral challenger, is not about the event itself. Instead, it signals the market's deep-seated nervousness about the UK's fiscal stability, presenting a tactical opportunity to fade the overblown risk premium.
Global diversification away from the US dollar, accelerated by geopolitical tensions, is creating structural demand for Eurozone Government Bonds (EGBs). This acts as a buffer, making Euro area term premia less reactive to global rate sell-offs in markets like the US and Japan, a trend expected to continue.
