Completing the tariff uncertainty, the US administration has faced a ruling that voided all tariff orders based on “national emergencies” using the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). An appeals court has now paused that ruling, and the US is also seen as having other avenues to pursue its tariff policy, albeit maybe slower and less sweeping.

We see rates markets trading range-bound, but with plenty of noise adding to the volatility. Looking at the heavy data schedule ahead, markets will be looking for cues that could bring back some directionality. But such triggers might be difficult to find. On Friday, we have the US core PCE number, which is expected to come in soft at just 0.1% month-on-month. These numbers are from April, however, and therefore are from too far back to assess the impact of US President Donald Trump’s ‘Liberation Day’. Next week’s US ISM and payroll numbers may get more attention since these should capture the economy’s reaction to the lingering policy uncertainty.

For euro rates breaking away from current levels, the data will need substantial surprises. Tuesday’s core CPI from May is likely to remain sticky around 2.7%, and even if the number comes in much higher or lower, the focus remains on tariffs. The number also won’t change the European Central Bank’s fully priced-in cut on Thursday, bringing the policy rate down to 2%. The 2Y swap rate is now consistent with an ECB landing around 1.75%. Negative developments in the trade negotiations could push this closer to 1.5%, but only if the data also turns significantly more sour can that handle be broken, in our view. As such, the wiggle room for the short end of the curve remains limited.

The 10Y euro swap rate is equally unlikely to break far from 2.5%. Trump’s headlines can move it closer to 2.4% or 2.6%, but outside that range, a clear shift in the data is needed. US data may play a more instrumental role for euro rates than domestic data, given that a hit to global risk sentiment can bull flatten the euro curve. Yet with 10y Bunds trading around the level of swaps, markets are already positioned for more headwinds and uncertainty ahead



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