However, we do think that as the year progresses—and probably not too far into the year—it may be an attractive time to lengthen duration in Europe, as the battle between growth and inflation will likely tilt to make the growth slowdown the dominant factor.
Sovereign-Bond Sensitivity to Rate Hikes Varies
Sovereign-bond valuations across the European periphery have realigned, with several countries now perceived as stronger issuers than in recent years. Spain and Ireland’s status has improved, and their bonds are now trading more in line with French government bonds (OATS). Portugal is slightly more highly rated than Italy, while Greece, after demotion in 2010, is set to return to investment-grade status and is already trading at a lower yield level than Italy. That leaves Italian government bonds (BTPs) as the standout potential beneficiary from policy easing.
And while, in our analysis, BTPs have the most price upside potential, their potential downside has also been moderated by the ECB’s recently-introduced transmission protection instrument (TPI), a program that may help prevent peripheral countries’ spreads widening too far from German Bunds.
Recently, we have seen BTP spreads over Bunds ranging between 100 and 200 basis points, depending on the extent of TPI intervention. But our research suggests that BTP spreads may widen as Bund yields rise and narrow as Bund yields fall. This makes BTPs more sensitive to rate changes than their German counterparts, and so potentially attractive to shorter-term investors with a higher risk tolerance.
In the lower-risk part of the market, 10-year Bund yields rose to around 2.6% in October 2022 and then retraced to a little below 2.2% this year. We see a 2.5%–3% yield range as an attractive Bund level for longer-term lower-risk investors.
We think investors can consider a duration game-plan in terms of time frame: shorter term, be more cautious, but over the coming quarters, look to increase interest-rate risk. And be mindful of which sovereign bonds will be most sensitive to euro rate changes and most appropriate for their particular risk tolerance.