
Nonfarm Data: A Key Test for Bond Market Bulls
After rapidly building long positions in U.S. Treasuries in recent weeks, global bond traders are focusing on the soon-to-be-released U.S. June nonfarm employment data as a crucial touchstone for whether the bond market rally can continue. Previously, a surprising increase in U.S. job openings in May showed strong labor market resilience, triggering a sell-off in the U.S. Treasury market and intensifying focus on the upcoming nonfarm data.
Analysts believe that if June nonfarm employment data is strong, it will dampen market expectations of a Fed rate cut in July, possibly leading to some profit-taking by longs, causing U.S. Treasury yields to rise again.
Continued Accumulation of U.S. Treasury Long Positions, Traders Increase Bets
Citigroup strategist David Bieber stated in a report that long positions in U.S. Treasuries have continuously accumulated, and after significant tactical buying in the past week, market long positions have reached a "highly one-sided expansion." This trend is reflected in the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) open interest data, where open interest in the 10-year U.S. Treasury futures contracts has surged significantly while the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield has fallen from over 4.4% to a low of 4.185% as of Tuesday.
In the 2-year Treasury futures market, open positions have risen for 10 consecutive trading days, reflecting traders' continued betting on rising U.S. Treasury prices.
Option Market Also Shows Bullish Bets
The bullish sentiment in U.S. Treasuries is not only evident in the futures market but also reflected in the options market. On Monday, a trader spent as much as $32 million on options betting on further rises in 10-year U.S. Treasury values, indicating large funds are wagering on continued declines in Treasury yields.
The market widely expects that the Fed may start a rate-cutting cycle as early as July to address slowing economic growth and easing inflation pressure. However, whether this expectation comes true will heavily depend on the soon-to-be-released nonfarm data results.
Data Surpassing Expectations May Trigger a Wave of Closures
Columbia Threadneedle Investment Global Rates Strategist Ed Al-Hussainy pointed out that current short-end U.S. Treasury long positions are too concentrated, with the market pricing the probability of a July rate cut at about 20%. If Thursday's nonfarm employment report is strong, for example with nonfarm employment numbers close to 200,000, it may completely erase expectations for a July rate cut, leading to a swift wave of closure of long positions.
Therefore, although the current market is inclined to be bullish on U.S. Treasuries, investors remain cautious and are using hedge trades to guard against the risk of rising yields.
Market Hedging Against a Yield Rebound
In Tuesday's operation in the U.S. Treasury market, some traders have begun to establish hedge positions, betting that after the release of Thursday's nonfarm data, the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield could rebound from its current level to around 4.3%. If the nonfarm data exceeds expectations, it might trigger a short-term correction in the bond market.
Nonfarm Data May Trigger Bond Market Volatility
The U.S. June nonfarm employment data to be released this Thursday will serve as a critical touchstone for bond market bulls, determining whether U.S. Treasury yields will continue to decline or rebound. If the employment data is weak, expectations for a Fed rate cut will heat up, possibly extending the U.S. Treasury rally; if the data is strong, yields might rebound significantly, posing short-term volatility risks to the market.
Investors will closely watch employment data, wage growth, and unemployment rate performance to judge the Fed's policy path and the direction of the global bond market.






