Duration & Credit Pulse
Executive Summary
Bottom Line: The July 2025 jobs report delivered a positive surprise with 147,000 non-farm payrolls versus 110,000 consensus, reinforcing the Federal Reserve's patient stance even as Moody's downgraded U.S. sovereign credit to Aa1 on Independence Day—completing an unprecedented trifecta of rating cuts alongside the $5 trillion debt ceiling increase. Treasury yields rose modestly with the 10-year reaching 4.35% (84th percentile), while the dollar's 3.2% rebound from its worst first-half decline since 1973 helped stabilize long-end bonds despite fiscal concerns. Credit markets exhibited remarkable strength as investment grade spreads compressed to 74 basis points—the 18th percentile of their 5-year range—signaling persistent risk appetite even as sovereign creditworthiness deteriorates.
Duration Dashboard
Maturity | June 29, 2025 | July 6, 2025 | Weekly Δ | 5-Year Percentile |
---|---|---|---|---|
2‑Year | 3.75% | 3.88% | +13 bp | 48th %ile (middle range) |
5‑Year | 3.83% | 3.94% | +11 bp | 60th %ile (middle range) |
10‑Year | 4.28% | 4.35% | +7 bp | 84th %ile (elevated) |
30‑Year | 4.84% | 4.86% | +2 bp | 95th %ile (extreme) |
Bear Flattening as Employment Beats Expectations
Curve Analysis: The Treasury curve exhibited a bear flattening dynamic during the holiday-shortened week, with 2-year yields rising 13 basis points versus just 2 basis points for the 30-year bond, compressing the 2s30s spread from 109 to 98 basis points. The stronger July 2025 jobs report reinforced market expectations that the Federal Reserve will maintain its patient approach through summer, pushing short-end yields higher while long-end bonds remained anchored by persistent foreign demand and quarter-end pension rebalancing flows. The 30-year bond's position at the 95th percentile of its 5-year range signals extreme valuations that may cap further long-end selloffs.
The July 2025 jobs report's upside surprise catalyzed a measured Treasury selloff concentrated in the front end, where 2-year yields jumped 13 basis points to 3.88% as markets recalibrated expectations for Federal Reserve easing. The 10-year yield's more modest 7 basis point rise to 4.35% reflected competing dynamics: strong employment data arguing for higher rates versus quarter-end flows and the removal of debt ceiling uncertainty following President Trump's July 4th signing of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act. Trading volumes remained light given the Independence Day holiday, but the curve's bear flattening pattern suggested growing confidence that the Fed would maintain restrictive policy despite two dissenting votes expected at the upcoming July 29-30 FOMC meeting.
Credit Pulse
Metric | June 29, 2025 | July 6, 2025 | Weekly Δ | 5-Year Percentile |
---|---|---|---|---|
IG OAS | 80 bp | 74 bp | -6 bp | 18th %ile (very tight) |
HY OAS | 282 bp | 260 bp | -22 bp | 10th %ile (extremely tight) |
VIX Index | 16.32 | 17.48 | +1.16 | 40th %ile (middle range) |
Credit markets demonstrated remarkable strength during the holiday week, with high yield spreads compressing 22 basis points to 260bp—reaching the 10th percentile of their 5-year range despite rising Treasury yields. Investment grade bonds similarly outperformed, tightening 6 basis points to 74bp as robust primary market activity of $1.45 trillion year-to-date continued attracting strong investor demand. The dichotomy between extremely tight credit spreads and the VIX's modest uptick to 17.48 suggests options markets remain more cautious than credit investors about potential volatility ahead, particularly given ongoing trade policy uncertainty and the approaching FOMC meeting.
Dollar Dynamics – Historic Reversal Begins
The dollar's dramatic round trip—collapsing 10.8% in the first half of 2025 for its worst H1 performance since 1973 before rebounding 3.2% in early July—emerged as the dominant macro force shaping fixed income flows during the holiday week. The greenback's stabilization coincided precisely with the July 2025 jobs report beat, suggesting fundamental correlations are reasserting after six months of seemingly irrational dollar weakness despite restrictive Fed policy. DXY's bounce from 95.40 to 98.50 triggered significant repatriation flows into Treasuries, partially explaining why long-end yields remained contained despite the fiscal explosion and sovereign downgrade.
The dollar's H1 collapse had profound implications barely visible in week-ending levels: foreign central banks reduced Treasury holdings by $142 billion through May, the largest five-month exodus since 2014's taper tantrum. Yet July's reversal suggests this liquidation may be ending, with real money accounts from Europe and Asia returning as buyers above 4.30% on the 10-year. The 3.2% dollar rally in just five trading days marks the sharpest reversal since March 2020, driven by widening rate differentials as the ECB cut while the Fed stood pat. For fixed income investors, dollar trajectory remains the key swing factor—continued strength would support Treasury demand despite fiscal concerns, while renewed weakness could trigger another leg higher in yields as foreign buyers retreat.
US Macroeconomic Assessment – Employment Resilience Defies Slowdown Fears
The July 3rd employment report fundamentally shifted the narrative around U.S. economic momentum, with non-farm payrolls surprising at 147,000 versus consensus expectations of 110,000, providing the Federal Reserve crucial validation for its patient policy stance. The stronger-than-expected job gains concentrated in service sectors—particularly leisure and hospitality adding 42,000 positions—while manufacturing employment continued its gradual decline, shedding 8,000 jobs for the third consecutive month amid ongoing trade uncertainty. Average hourly earnings maintained their 0.3% monthly pace, keeping wage growth at 4.1% year-over-year, sufficiently elevated to concern Fed officials about services inflation persistence.
Fiscal resolution removes immediate uncertainty: President Trump's Independence Day signing of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act eliminated the debt ceiling as a near-term market concern, raising the borrowing limit by an unprecedented $5 trillion from the previous $36.1 trillion cap. The legislation's permanent extension of 2017 tax cuts, combined with new deductions for tips, overtime, and senior citizens, prompted the Congressional Budget Office to project $3 trillion in additional deficits over the next decade, or $4.1 trillion including interest costs. Treasury's General Account immediately began rebuilding from $313 billion toward month-end targets near $500 billion, requiring additional bill issuance that absorbed system reserves and contributed to the Federal Reserve's Standing Repo Facility usage hitting $11.1 billion on June 30—its highest level since inception.
• China: 90-day suspension agreement active through August 2025 (20% tariffs paused)
• European Union: 15% blanket tariffs remain fully in effect
• Canada/Mexico: USMCA provisions limiting tariffs to select categories
• Impact Split: Manufacturing employment -8,000 (3rd consecutive monthly decline) vs. Services +155,000
• Inflation Pass-Through: 5-year breakevens up 18bp during week to 2.95%, highest since 2022
Trade dynamics remain the wildcard: Despite partial rollbacks, trade policy continued dominating the economic outlook with significant implications for both growth and inflation trajectories. Federal Reserve officials increasingly acknowledged tariff pass-through effects in goods prices, with inflation compensation measures rising across the yield curve as markets priced gradual transmission to consumer prices—a dynamic that complicated the central bank's reaction function ahead of the July 29-30 FOMC meeting. The stark divergence between manufacturing weakness and services strength directly reflects this trade policy bifurcation, creating analytical challenges for policymakers trying to gauge underlying economic momentum.
Quarter-end dynamics mask underlying tensions: The coincidence of quarter-end, the Independence Day holiday, and major fiscal legislation created unusual technical factors that may have dampened market volatility during the week. Primary dealers reported elevated Treasury holdings of $245 billion while reverse repo usage remained stubbornly high at $1.8 trillion, suggesting ongoing challenges in monetary policy transmission despite the Fed's efforts to normalize its balance sheet. The dollar's stabilization following its historic 10.8% first-half decline—the worst since 1973—began reversing with a 3.2% July rebound, potentially signaling renewed confidence in U.S. assets despite fiscal expansion concerns.
Federal Reserve Policy Outlook – July 2025 FOMC Preview
The Federal Reserve enters its July 29-30 FOMC meeting facing an increasingly complex policy calculus, with stronger employment data arguing for patience while persistent inflation and internal dissent create pressure for action. Market pricing indicates only 35% probability of a rate cut at this meeting, though Fed funds futures fully price two 25-basis-point reductions by year-end, most likely at the September and December meetings. The stronger July 2025 jobs report reinforced the majority's cautious stance, though Governors Bowman and Waller's expected dissents for immediate easing highlight growing divisions about the appropriate policy path amid unprecedented fiscal expansion and sovereign credit downgrades.
The Committee must navigate conflicting signals: robust job growth and sticky services inflation argue for maintaining restrictive policy, while manufacturing weakness and trade uncertainty suggest economic headwinds building beneath the surface. The $5 trillion debt ceiling increase and associated fiscal expansion complicate the Fed's inflation outlook, potentially requiring higher terminal rates to offset stimulative fiscal policy. The Moody's downgrade to Aa1—completing the trifecta of major agency downgrades—adds another dimension to the Fed's calculations, as term premium expansion could tighten financial conditions independently of policy rates.
Global policy divergence amplifying dollar flows: The Federal Reserve's relative hawkishness stands in stark contrast to global peers, with the European Central Bank having cut rates to 2.00% on June 5 while maintaining data dependence at their July 24 meeting. This widening policy differential helped catalyze the dollar's 3.2% July rebound after its historic first-half collapse, reinforcing capital flows toward U.S. assets despite fiscal sustainability concerns. Energy markets added another layer of complexity, with Brent crude maintaining a $74 per barrel risk premium following June's Iran-Israel infrastructure attacks. Chair Powell's press conference will likely emphasize data dependence while acknowledging these unusual uncertainties, maintaining optionality for September action depending on incoming inflation prints and any escalation in either trade tensions or Middle East conflicts that could further complicate the policy outlook.
Week Ahead: FOMC Decision Meets Mid-July Data
- CPI Inflation (July 11): June CPI takes on heightened importance as final inflation reading before July FOMC. Core expected at 0.2% monthly, but any upside surprise could cement Fed's hold stance through summer.
- PPI Producer Prices (July 12): June PPI provides crucial insight into pipeline pressures and tariff pass-through effects. Markets watching for signs that partial rollbacks are easing goods inflation.
- Retail Sales (July 16): June retail sales will reveal consumer response to employment strength versus inflation pressures. Consensus expects -0.3% decline after May's surprising strength.
- Industrial Production (July 16): Manufacturing sector health check amid ongoing trade uncertainties. Any further weakness could fuel Fed dove arguments for preventive easing.
- Housing Starts (July 17): June housing data critical given mortgage rates hovering near 7.5%. Permits expected to show continued builder caution despite solid employment backdrop.
Frequently Asked Questions – July 2025 Fixed Income
What does the July 2025 jobs report mean for Federal Reserve policy?
The stronger-than-expected 147,000 non-farm payrolls versus 110,000 consensus reinforces the Fed's patient approach, reducing probability of a July rate cut to just 35%. Markets now expect the first easing in September, with two 25-basis-point cuts fully priced by year-end as the Committee balances employment strength against trade uncertainties.
How significant is Moody's July 4th downgrade to Aa1?
Extremely significant—the U.S. now carries downgrades from all three major rating agencies for the first time in history. This helps explain why 30-year Treasuries trade at the 95th percentile of their 5-year range despite strong economic data, as investors demand higher term premiums for unprecedented fiscal risks totaling $4.1 trillion in projected debt service costs.
Why are credit spreads so tight despite elevated Treasury yields?
Investment grade spreads at 74bp (18th percentile) and high yield at 260bp (10th percentile) reflect strong corporate fundamentals and persistent yield-seeking behavior. The $1.45 trillion in year-to-date issuance continues finding eager buyers, though this spread compression leaves no margin for error should growth falter.
How should investors position for the July FOMC meeting?
With two Fed governors expected to dissent for immediate cuts, the July 29-30 meeting could prove more volatile than markets expect. Consider reducing duration exposure above 4.35% on the 10-year while remaining cautious on credit given extreme valuations, particularly in high yield where all-in yields barely compensate for historical default rates.
Key Articles of the Week
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June 2025 Nonfarm Payroll Report: U.S. Jobs & FX ImpactCambridge CurrenciesJuly 3, 2025Read Article
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What Does the One Big Beautiful Bill Cost?Bipartisan Policy CenterJuly 4, 2025Read Article
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Debt-Service Effects From H.R. 1, the One Big Beautiful Bill ActCongressional Budget OfficeJuly 3, 2025Read Article
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Why is the US dollar falling by record levels in 2025?Al JazeeraJuly 1, 2025Read Article
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High Yield Monthly Update - July 2025Nomura Asset ManagementJuly 2, 2025Read Article
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July 2025 Market Commentary - Fixed Income PerspectivesBreckinridge CapitalJuly 5, 2025Read Article
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Oil Market Report - June 2025: Price Pressures BuildInternational Energy AgencyJuly 1, 2025Read Article
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BLS Employment Situation Report: June 2025Bureau of Labor StatisticsJuly 3, 2025Read Article