Good morning. The College of Michigan shopper sentiment index, launched Friday, improved rather more than anticipated, ending a 5-month downward development. There was enchancment throughout wealth ranges, political affiliations, age, and sub-indices starting from perceptions of the economic system to expectations for the longer term. It appears that evidently customers are rising much less nervous about tariffs and mass deportations. Or pondering they received’t really occur. Trump does observe a sure pattern on this stuff, in any case. E mail us: unhedged@ft.com.
Oil
Israel’s assault on Iranian nuclear services has escalated to back-and-forth missile volleys that proceed as we write. A lot is at stake. Markets, as all the time, are specializing in what they will most simply quantify — the oil value. The consensus, which appears smart to us, is that whereas costs may go greater from right here, the prospect of an enormous spiralling enhance is sort of low. “What I’m seeing in my channels will not be that the best value is in but, however that most individuals are promoting the large highs, the Straight-of-Hormuz-closure sort of dangers,” says Rory Johnston, founding father of Commodity Context.
The explanations to consider that the battle will stay contained are nicely rehearsed: Iran is in a weak place, Israel has tacit US assist, and so forth. The current historical past of the oil value offers some helpful context right here. Except Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, the large sustained swings within the oil value because the flip of the millennium have been pushed by broader geoeconomic tendencies, not geopolitical ones:
Why is that this battle not just like the Ukraine battle? As a result of Russia is a a lot greater producer of each oil and gasoline than Iran, and since Europe’s concentrated dependence on Russian provide required a significant rearrangement of provide chains. Additionally, the world economic system was choosing up steam on the time, leading to greater oil demand; the worldwide economic system is at present projected to decelerate.
That stated, geopolitical occasions usually trigger short-term dislocations within the oil value — although generally the path of change will be counterintuitive. As Hunter Kornfeind at Rapidan Vitality identified to us, the US invasion of Iraq momentarily introduced down the oil value in March 2003, fairly than pushing it up, although it rose once more after:

However usually, unstable occasions within the Center East, notably those who immediately have an effect on oil manufacturing or exports, add to the oil value. One of many greatest intraday actions in current historical past got here in 2019 when Iranian drone attacks hit oilfields and huge oil processing services in Saudi Arabia, taking them offline for a number of days and placing a dent in international provide:

In 2023, when Hamas attacked southern Israel, the value popped, as individuals feared full-fledged regional escalation. However none materialised:

Since then, the market has discovered to shrug off rising tensions within the area. When Iran and Israel got here to blows in April 2024 and October 2024, daily strikes have been largely restrained.
However this week’s occasions are clearly totally different in type, and whereas the value will increase do appear prone to be contained, low-probability, high-impact outcomes — tail dangers — should not be ignored. Johnston highlights one risk: that Israel, provoked by assaults on its cities, strikes Iran’s fundamental oil export services on Kharg Island (thus far, Israel’s strikes have solely focused Iran’s home oil economic system). As soon as its capacity to export is compromised, Iran has much less to lose by mining the Straight of Hormuz — and may begin hitting different international locations’ regional oil services, in a repeat of the 2019 strikes. A wider battle may ensue. “As soon as the state of affairs spirals, all of the tail dangers come into play without delay,” he says. “They aren’t impartial dangers. So even a 1-2 per cent enhance within the likelihood of this stuff may transfer the oil value dramatically.”
(Reiter and Armstrong)
European bond yield convergence
“Italy, Greece and Spain emerge as winners in bond market anxiousness,” would be the FT headline that, learn from the angle of a decade or so in the past, would appear essentially the most unlikely (edging out even last year’s “Donald Trump elected US president in historic comeback”). Again then, the 5 “Piigs” — Portugal, Eire, Italy, Greece and Spain — bore the brunt of the Eurozone debt disaster. However the 4 “Pigs” (Eire hit escape velocity some time in the past) at the moment are expected to develop sooner than their richer northern neighbours, and their governments have been better stewards of public funds of late.
Accordingly, spreads between southern European and German yields (the gold commonplace in Europe) have tightened significantly:

This has the makings of an funding case. If de-dollarisation and the pivot away from US Treasuries is actual, buyers could chase yields all the best way to peripheral Europe. Actually, the simultaneous falls in southern European yields and rise in US Treasury yields could also be proof of the commerce away from America.
However let’s not get too excited. This can be a two-sided story. Although Pigs yields have fallen significantly, German Bund yields have been on a rising development, contributing to the change. Bund markets are responding to the elimination of Germany’s debt ceiling and guarantees of fiscal stimulus by new chancellor Friedrich Merz. However the pleasure has cooled a bit not too long ago:

Keep in mind that Merz’s coalition is wafer skinny. “The sentiment in direction of that [German debt] thought has outstripped political realities,” says Daleep Singh, chief international economist at PGIM.
And as Davide Oneglia at TS Lombard defined to us, Germany’s tight fiscal guidelines and the hunt for protected belongings after the Eurozone disaster resulted in German bonds getting a “convenience yield”. Their stability made them interesting as collateral which, helped by their relative shortage, held down yields. You may see the comfort yield in two spreads: that between 10-year German Bunds and on equal debt issued by Germany’s public funding financial institution, whose bonds are additionally assured by the federal government; and that between Bunds and the 10-year in a single day index swap charge, thought-about to be the risk-free charge in Europe. The rise in these spreads exhibits that the comfort yield is evaporating as Bunds turn into much less scarce. The graph beneath is Oneglia’s (he calls out the beginning of the ECB’s quantitative easing in 2015 and the beginning of its asset buy programme in 2020, which put extra downward strain on Bund yields):

The convergence between Bunds and Pigs bond yields, in different phrases, could say extra concerning the finish of the Bund comfort yield than the improved outlook on the periphery.
Lastly, Portuguese, Italian, Greek, Spanish bonds — whereas extra interesting than they’d been — are nonetheless not that interesting relative to Treasuries. The international locations all have excessive debt to GDP ratios, and will come below actual pressure if there’s a international slowdown, from tariffs or no matter else, whereas the US advantages from a (smaller however nonetheless palpable) struggle to security. Based on Gordon Shannon at TwentyFour Asset Administration, there may be not an enormous common push within the Pigs international locations to “make fiscal positions look in any far more sustainable in the long run . . . the politicians could lack the need.”
(Reiter)
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