Duration & Credit Pulse
Executive Summary
Bottom Line: Fixed income markets found their equilibrium during the week of June 8-15, 2025 as May's CPI inflation came in at just 0.1% monthly—the most benign reading in eighteen months—while consumer sentiment staged its first improvement of the year with an 8-point surge to 60.5, crushing expectations. This goldilocks combination of controlled inflation and improving confidence validated the Federal Reserve's patient stance at 4.25%-4.50% while opening the door for potential rate cuts later in 2025, though the curve's bear steepening dynamic with the 2s30s spread widening to 99bp revealed persistent long-end concerns about fiscal sustainability despite the 10-year yield falling 3 basis points to 4.448% at the 90th percentile of its 5-year range.
Duration Dashboard
Maturity | June 8, 2025 | June 15, 2025 | Weekly Δ | 5-Year Percentile |
---|---|---|---|---|
2‑Year | 4.00% | 3.97% | -3 bp | 54th %ile (middle range) |
5‑Year | 4.08% | 4.03% | -5 bp | 68th %ile (middle range) |
10‑Year | 4.48% | 4.45% | -3 bp | 90th %ile (extreme) |
30‑Year | 4.94% | 4.96% | +1 bp | 98th %ile (extreme) |
Modest Bear Steepening Despite Inflation Relief
Curve Analysis: Treasury markets exhibited a modest bear steepening dynamic despite benign inflation data, with the 2s30s spread widening by 4 basis points to 99bp as long-end yields proved resilient while front-end rates declined. The 2-year yield's 3bp drop reflected recalibrating Fed expectations following the 0.1% CPI print, yet the 30-year's marginal 1bp increase to 4.96%—remaining at the 98th percentile of its 5-year range—reveals persistent concerns about long-term fiscal sustainability and heavy supply dynamics. This divergence between short and long rates suggests that while markets price in near-term Fed easing, structural factors including $1.9 trillion deficits and reduced foreign demand continue pressuring the long end. Despite the week's constructive inflation tone, the 10-year's position at the 90th percentile underscores that rates remain historically elevated across the curve.
The week's defining moment arrived Tuesday morning when May's Consumer Price Index registered just 0.1% monthly growth, matching the smallest increase since December 2023 and bringing annual inflation to 2.4%—tantalizingly close to the Fed's 2% target. This benign reading, reinforced by Wednesday's identical 0.1% Producer Price Index print, triggered an immediate Treasury rally that saw the 10-year yield touch 4.36% intraday before stabilizing. Yet despite the inflation relief, the curve's bear steepening dynamic—with the 2s30s spread widening 4 basis points to 99bp—revealed that fiscal concerns and heavy long-end supply continue to pressure duration even as near-term rate cut expectations build.
Credit Pulse
Metric | June 8, 2025 | June 15, 2025 | Weekly Δ | 5-Year Percentile |
---|---|---|---|---|
IG OAS | 80 bp | 81 bp | +1 bp | 29th %ile (middle range) |
HY OAS | 295 bp | 290 bp | -5 bp | 23rd %ile (low) |
VIX Index | 17.16 | 19.11 | +1.95 | 49th %ile (middle range) |
Credit markets operated in rarefied territory throughout the week, with investment grade spreads holding steady at 81 basis points—a level residing at just the 29th percentile of the 5-year distribution—while high yield compressed further to 290bp, marking the 23rd percentile. This persistent spread compression occurred despite a nearly 2-point jump in the VIX to 19.11, suggesting credit investors remain remarkably sanguine about default risk even as equity volatility increased. The disconnect between historically tight spreads and rising volatility metrics created a fascinating divergence that typically resolves through credit widening, though strong technicals from $149 billion in June investment grade issuance meeting robust demand kept spreads anchored.
Primary Market Dynamics – Supply Creating Its Own Demand
The corporate bond market witnessed extraordinary technical dynamics during the week as June's $149 billion investment grade issuance calendar—on track to be the second-largest monthly total in history—met with voracious demand that kept new issue concessions near zero. This supply tsunami, contributing to Q2's robust $426 billion total that exceeded prior year by 5%, should have pressured spreads wider; instead, the wall of new paper was absorbed instantly by yield-starved investors desperate to lock in all-in yields before anticipated Fed cuts. The phenomenon of supply creating its own demand reached absurd levels Thursday when a $4 billion Apple deal was 8x oversubscribed despite pricing through fair value.
Sector dynamics revealed clear winners and losers in the primary market derby. Utilities led with 18% year-over-year issuance growth, driven by insatiable capital needs for data center expansion and grid electrification—themes that resonated with ESG-conscious allocators. Energy lagged with just $12 billion in June issuance as recession fears and volatile oil prices kept investors wary. Financial issuers capitalized on tight spreads to term out funding, with banks issuing $38 billion during the week including a massive $6 billion JPMorgan deal that priced at just +65bp over Treasuries. Most remarkably, foreign demand accounted for 42% of allocations in deals with available data, highlighting how negative rates in Europe and Japan continue driving international buyers into US credit despite currency hedging costs that erode much of the yield advantage.
US Macroeconomic Assessment – Inflation Victory Lap Premature but Welcome
The week of June 8-15, 2025 delivered the most constructive inflation data in eighteen months, with both consumer and producer prices advancing just 0.1% monthly—a result that would have seemed impossible during 2024's tariff-induced price surge. May's Consumer Price Index, released Tuesday at 8:30 AM ET to rapt market attention, showed headline inflation decelerating to 2.4% annually while core CPI held at 2.8%, with the monthly prints coming in below even the most optimistic estimates. The disinflationary impulse gained credibility Wednesday when Producer Prices matched the benign 0.1% monthly gain, suggesting pipeline pressures were genuinely abating rather than merely pausing.
Consumer psychology shifts decisively: The University of Michigan's preliminary June sentiment reading provided the week's biggest surprise, surging to 60.5 from May's 52.5 and obliterating the 53.5 consensus estimate. This 8-point monthly gain—the largest since December 2021—reflected more than just inflation relief; it captured a fundamental shift in household psychology as the 90-day tariff pause announced April 9 allowed consumers to regain confidence in their purchasing power. Most critically, one-year inflation expectations collapsed from 6.6% to 5.1% while five-year expectations moderated to 4.1%, suggesting the Fed's credibility on price stability was being restored after months of doubt.
Labor market maintains goldilocks balance: While employment data took a backseat to inflation headlines, the underlying trends remained constructive for the soft landing narrative. Initial jobless claims held near 220,000 throughout the week while continuing claims remained below 1.8 million, indicating companies were retaining workers despite slowing growth. The quits rate's decline to 2.1% suggested workers felt less confident about finding new positions, a dynamic that should moderate wage growth without triggering layoffs—precisely the labor market cooling the Fed desires.
Fiscal dynamics complicate the celebration: Treasury's successful $22 billion 30-year bond auction on June 12, which stopped through at 4.844%, demonstrated that despite fiscal concerns, global demand for US duration remained intact. However, with the federal deficit tracking toward $1.9 trillion for fiscal 2025—nearly 7% of GDP during an expansion—markets increasingly question the sustainability of current fiscal trajectories. The auction's 2.58 bid-to-cover ratio, while solid, marked a decline from recent averages, suggesting international buyers were becoming more selective even as domestic accounts filled the gap.
Federal Reserve positioned for September pivot: The Fed's reaction function underwent a subtle but meaningful shift following the week's benign CPI data, with fed funds futures repricing to show a 65% probability of a 25 basis point cut at the September 16-17 FOMC meeting. The combination of inflation approaching target at 2.4% annually, consumer expectations moderating dramatically, and credit markets functioning smoothly gives the Committee cover to begin normalizing policy from its current restrictive 4.25%-4.50% stance without appearing to cave to political pressure. The real fed funds rate now sits at nearly 200 basis points—among the most restrictive levels of the past two decades when adjusted for current inflation. Market participants increasingly view the Fed's patient approach as validated, though the Committee faces a delicate balance: move too quickly and risk reigniting inflation expectations just as they're stabilizing; wait too long and risk tipping the economy into recession as lagged effects of past tightening continue working through the system.
Week Ahead: Key Data and Events
Markets face a data-heavy calendar with May retail sales (June 18) expected to show -0.2% decline as tariff front-loading exhausts, while housing starts (June 19) face headwinds from 7%+ mortgage rates and elevated construction costs. Fed speakers including Williams (Monday), Bowman (Tuesday), and Barkin (Thursday) will parse CPI implications for September policy, with particular focus on whether June's inflation relief marks a turning point or temporary respite. The expiration of the 90-day tariff pause on July 9 looms as the next major catalyst, with preliminary trade talks scheduled for the final week of June potentially setting the stage for either extension or escalation.
US Economic Positioning and Global Context
America's economic exceptionalism faced its most serious test of 2025 as global central banks diverged dramatically from Fed policy, creating unprecedented cross-currents in currency and bond markets. The European Central Bank's eighth consecutive rate cut to 2.00% on June 11, even as President Lagarde declared the easing cycle "nearing its end," highlighted Europe's growth struggles while the Bank of Japan's aggressive tapering of bond purchases—reducing monthly JGB buying from ¥4.1 trillion to a planned ¥2.1 trillion by Q1 2027—signaled Tokyo's confidence in finally escaping deflation's grip after three decades.
Dollar dominance questions multiply: The week exposed growing international discomfort with dollar hegemony as gold prices pushed above $3,280 per ounce, gaining 26% year-to-date in a clear vote of no-confidence in fiat currencies broadly. China's measured response to maintaining the 30% total tariff burden through the 90-day pause period, rather than escalating, suggested Beijing was playing a longer game—accumulating gold reserves, expanding yuan settlement agreements, and building alternative payment infrastructure through its digital currency initiatives. For US fixed income markets, this gradual diversification away from dollars translates into a slow-burning reduction in the structural bid for Treasuries that has suppressed yields for decades. The 10-year's persistence at the 90th percentile of its 5-year range, despite benign inflation data, may reflect this evolving reality where foreign central banks no longer reflexively recycle surpluses into US government debt. Credit markets' historic spread compression amid these tectonic shifts suggests dangerous complacency about a world where the Fed's every move no longer dictates global financial conditions.
Key Articles of the Week
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Consumer Price Index - May 2025 ResultsU.S. Bureau of Labor StatisticsJune 11, 2025Read Article
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Producer Price Index - May 2025 ResultsU.S. Bureau of Labor StatisticsJune 12, 2025Read Article
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US 30-Year Bond Sale Spurs 'Sigh of Relief' After Weeks of AngstBloombergJune 12, 2025Read Article
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University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Preliminary for June 60.5 vs 53.5 EstimateForexliveJune 13, 2025Read Article
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June 2025 Market CommentaryBreckinridge Capital AdvisorsJune 15, 2025Read Article
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Corporate Bonds: Mid-Year Outlook 2025Charles SchwabJune 14, 2025Read Article
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Q3 2025 Corporate Bond Market OutlookBreckinridge Capital AdvisorsJune 12, 2025Read Article
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European Central Bank Cuts Rates to 2.00% in Eighth Consecutive EasingReutersJune 11, 2025Read Article
Frequently Asked Questions – CPI Inflation June 2025
What does the 0.1% CPI inflation mean for Fed rate cuts in 2025?
The 0.1% monthly CPI reading for May 2025 significantly increases the probability of Federal Reserve rate cuts, with markets now pricing a 65% chance of a 25 basis point reduction at the September FOMC meeting. This benign inflation print, the smallest in eighteen months, validates the Fed's patient approach and provides cover to begin normalizing policy from the current restrictive 4.25%-4.50% range.
Why are Treasury yields still elevated despite falling inflation?
Despite May's constructive inflation data, the 10-year Treasury yield remains at the 90th percentile of its 5-year range at 4.45%, reflecting persistent concerns about fiscal sustainability with deficits approaching $1.9 trillion. Additionally, reduced foreign central bank demand and the structural shift away from dollar recycling keeps term premium elevated even as inflation moderates toward the Fed's 2% target.
How tight are credit spreads compared to historical norms?
Corporate credit spreads are exceptionally compressed by historical standards, with investment grade at 81 basis points (29th percentile) and high yield at 290 basis points (23rd percentile) of their respective 5-year ranges. This spread compression despite elevated Treasury yields reflects desperate reach for yield and could reverse violently during the next risk-off event given reduced dealer inventories.
What caused consumer sentiment to surge 8 points in June 2025?
The University of Michigan sentiment index jumped to 60.5 from 52.5, driven primarily by the 90-day tariff pause announced in April that allowed inflation expectations to plummet from 6.6% to 5.1% for the one-year horizon. This dramatic shift in consumer psychology, combined with May's benign CPI data, restored household confidence in purchasing power and economic stability after months of tariff-induced uncertainty.