Duration & Credit Pulse
Executive Summary
Bottom Line: Synchronized economic contraction emerged as both ISM indices fell below 50 for the first time since 2023, with services PMI's shocking plunge to 49.9 catalyzing a dramatic fixed income rotation that saw Treasury yields initially spike to 4.51% before rallying sharply on growth fears. The week's contradictory signals—139,000 payrolls beating expectations while ADP showed just 37,000 jobs and manufacturing remained mired in recession—left markets grappling with stagflationary dynamics as wage growth persisted at 3.9% annually, ultimately pushing 10-year yields to extreme historical percentiles despite credit spreads paradoxically tightening on carry trade momentum.
Duration Dashboard
Maturity | June 1, 2025 | June 8, 2025 | Weekly Δ | 5-Year Percentile |
---|---|---|---|---|
2‑Year | 3.90% | 4.04% | +14 bp | 58th %ile (middle range) |
5‑Year | 3.96% | 4.12% | +16 bp | 74th %ile (middle range) |
10‑Year | 4.40% | 4.51% | +11 bp | 92nd %ile (extreme) |
30‑Year | 4.93% | 4.97% | +4 bp | 99th %ile (extreme) |
Belly-Led Selloff Pushes Yields to Extremes
Curve Analysis: Treasury markets experienced a pronounced belly-led selloff as 5-year yields surged 16 basis points, outpacing both the front end and long end in a classic bear steepening dynamic. The 10-year yield's climb to 4.51% pushed it into the 92nd percentile of its 5-year range, while the 30-year's approach to 5% marked an extraordinary 99th percentile reading. Despite the week's dramatic economic data misses, the curve maintained its modest steepness with 2s10s at 47 basis points, suggesting markets remain skeptical of imminent Fed easing even as growth concerns mount. The relatively muted 4 basis point move in 30-year yields versus the aggressive selloff in intermediate maturities reflected pension fund and foreign buying at the long end.
The Treasury market's volatile week began with yields grinding higher on residual inflation concerns before Wednesday's shocking ADP employment miss of just 37,000 jobs triggered a sharp reversal. The 10-year yield touched 4.51% intraday following Friday's mixed employment report—which showed headline strength at 139,000 jobs but concerning underlying weakness—before closing the week at that level as investors struggled to reconcile conflicting growth and inflation signals. The persistence of 3.9% wage growth amid clear economic deceleration created a stagflationary backdrop that left duration investors with few good options.
Credit Pulse
Metric | June 1, 2025 | June 8, 2025 | Weekly Δ | 5-Year Percentile |
---|---|---|---|---|
IG OAS | 83 bp | 81 bp | -2 bp | 29th %ile (middle range) |
HY OAS | 306 bp | 292 bp | -14 bp | 23rd %ile (tight) |
VIX Index | 18.57 | 16.77 | -1.80 | 32nd %ile (middle range) |
Credit markets displayed remarkable resilience in the face of deteriorating economic fundamentals, with high yield spreads compressing 14 basis points to 292bp—reaching the 23rd percentile of the 5-year range. Investment grade spreads edged 2 basis points tighter to 81bp, maintaining their position near multi-year tights despite the week's growth shocks. This disconnect between spread levels and economic reality reflected powerful technical dynamics: record first-quarter issuance of $585 billion had been easily absorbed, creating a shortage of paper just as yield-starved investors poured into credit seeking carry in the "higher for longer" environment.
US Macroeconomic Assessment – Stagflation Fears Take Center Stage
The week of June 1-8 delivered a series of economic data releases that fundamentally altered market perceptions of the US growth trajectory, with Wednesday's catastrophic ADP employment report showing just 37,000 private sector jobs added versus expectations of 110,000 marking the weakest reading since March 2023. This preceded Friday's official employment report which, despite beating headline expectations at 139,000, revealed troubling underlying dynamics including 95,000 in downward revisions to prior months and a household survey showing 696,000 fewer employed persons.
Labor market momentum evaporates despite headline beat: The divergence between establishment and household survey data reached alarming proportions, with 625,000 people leaving the labor force entirely in May. Federal government employment contracted for the fourth consecutive month, shedding 22,000 positions as DOGE-related initiatives accelerated workforce reductions that have now eliminated over 275,000 jobs since January. Most concerning was the persistence of wage growth at 3.9% annually despite clear labor market softening, suggesting embedded inflation expectations that will complicate any eventual Fed easing cycle.
PMI collapse signals broad-based economic weakness: Monday's ISM Manufacturing print of 48.5 disappointed modest expectations for improvement, but the real shock came Wednesday when ISM Services plummeted to 49.9 from 51.6, marking its first contraction since June 2024. The services employment component's continued weakness and new orders falling into contraction territory suggested the economic slowdown was broadening dangerously beyond manufacturing. Yet prices paid components remained stubbornly elevated—69.4 for manufacturing and 64.3 for services—creating classic stagflationary conditions.
Fed trapped as inflation persists amid growth collapse: The combination of slowing growth and sticky inflation left the Federal Reserve in an increasingly untenable position heading into their June 17-18 meeting. CME FedWatch probabilities showed markets pricing just two quarter-point cuts for all of 2025, with September emerging as the earliest likely timing. The persistence of core inflation pressures—evident in elevated wage growth and services prices paid—meant the Fed lacked flexibility to respond aggressively to weakening growth, a dynamic that Fed Chair Powell acknowledged in his June 2 speech noting the need to "wait to learn more about the likely course of the economy."
Federal Reserve Policy Outlook
The Federal Reserve entered the week maintaining its patient stance at 4.25%-4.50%, but the dramatic economic data deterioration—particularly the services PMI's shocking fall into contraction—intensified the central bank's policy dilemma. Market pricing through the CME FedWatch tool reflected growing skepticism about the Fed's ability to navigate between persistent inflation and collapsing growth momentum, with the probability of rates remaining unchanged through July rising to 78.6% even as recession risks mounted.
The week's developments reinforced market expectations that any easing cycle would be both delayed and limited in scope. Two-year Treasury yields trading at 4.04%—still below the fed funds rate—suggested some expectation of eventual cuts, but the modest inversion reflected doubts about the Fed's flexibility given wage growth stuck at 3.9%. The central bank's quantitative tightening program continued at its reduced pace of approximately $20 billion monthly, with the balance sheet now down to $6.7 trillion. Looking ahead to the June 17-18 FOMC meeting, updated economic projections would likely show the Committee grappling with how to acknowledge deteriorating growth without abandoning their inflation-fighting credibility.
Week Ahead: Critical Inflation Data Tests Stagflation Thesis
- CPI Inflation (June 12): May CPI takes on heightened importance given persistent wage pressures. Core expected at 0.3% monthly, but any upside surprise would cement "higher for longer" narrative despite growth weakness.
- PPI & Retail Sales (June 13): Producer prices will reveal pipeline pressures while retail sales data shows consumer resilience. Weakness in spending alongside elevated prices would confirm stagflation fears.
- University of Michigan Sentiment (June 14): Consumer inflation expectations component critical given Fed's focus on anchoring. Rising expectations despite weak confidence would complicate policy response.
- Empire & Philly Fed Manufacturing (June 17): Regional manufacturing surveys provide early June reads ahead of FOMC meeting. Continued contraction would underscore broad industrial weakness.
- FOMC Meeting (June 17-18): No rate change expected but updated dot plot and economic projections crucial. Powell's press conference must thread needle between acknowledging weakness and maintaining inflation vigilance.
US Economic Positioning and Global Context
The United States finds itself at a critical economic juncture where traditional policy prescriptions fail to address the simultaneous challenges of slowing growth and persistent inflation. The week's synchronized PMI contraction, occurring alongside 3.9% wage growth and services inflation that refuses to moderate, creates a policy straitjacket that leaves few good options. Unlike previous slowdowns where the Fed could ease aggressively, current dynamics—shaped by structural labor shortages, deglobalization pressures, and fiscal dominance—mean monetary policy must remain restrictive even as recession risks build.
Global divergence complicates Fed's calculus: While the Fed remained paralyzed by stagflation concerns, global central banks moved ahead with policy adjustments. The ECB's well-telegraphed June rate cut to 2.0% and Bank of Japan's maintenance of its dovish stance created widening policy divergences that supported the dollar despite US fundamental weakness. The Dollar Index's range-bound trading between 96.79-97.40 reflected these competing forces—Fed "higher for longer" supporting the currency while growth concerns limited upside. For fixed income investors, the week crystallized a new regime where both duration and credit carry elevated risks: Treasury yields at extreme historical percentiles offer little value given fiscal sustainability concerns, while credit spreads at multi-year tights ignore mounting fundamental headwinds. The combination of economic contraction, persistent inflation, and policy paralysis suggests volatility suppression regimes will end abruptly when reality finally overwhelms technical flows.
Key Articles of the Week
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ADP National Employment Report: Private Sector Employment Increased by 37,000 Jobs in MayADP Media CenterJune 4, 2025Read Article
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Services PMI at 49.9%; May 2025 Services ISM Report On BusinessPR NewswireJune 4, 2025Read Article
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Employment Situation Summary - May 2025 ResultsBureau of Labor StatisticsJune 6, 2025Read Article
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US Jobs Report May 2025: Live News on Employment, PayrollsBloombergJune 6, 2025Read Article
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Manufacturing PMI at 48.5%; May 2025 Manufacturing ISM ReportPR NewswireJune 2, 2025Read Article
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Treasury yields tick higher after latest U.S. jobs data releaseCNBCJune 6, 2025Read Article
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Fed Chair Powell: Division of International Finance 75th Anniversary SpeechFederal ReserveJune 2, 2025Read Article
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Treasury Yields Snapshot: June 6, 2025ETF DatabaseJune 6, 2025Read Article