Global bonds and stocks are rallying on hopes that the latest signs of weakness in the US economy will push the Federal Reserve to rethink the aggressive monetary policy tightening that some fear will trigger a recession.

While the so-called Fed pivot has long been hoped for, it got another jolt this week with the release of weaker-than-expected manufacturing data in the US. The dollar extended losses Tuesday, and European equities jumped, following a similar rally in the US on Monday.

The moves came as traders trimmed bets on future rate hikes, with money markets signaling that the fed funds rate will peak by March. The two-year Treasury yield briefly slid below 4% for the first time since Sept. 21. German short-dated bonds rallied even more, with yields down as much as 16 basis points to 1.46%.

“Central banks may start to realise that raising rates so fast -- especially in Europe -- will lead to a severe recession so they slow down and get volatility down,” said Jens Peter Sorensen, chief analyst at Danske Bank A/S.

But those trying to call an end to the relentless rise of interest rates have been burnt before. Hopes that an economic slowdown would start to tame the march higher in prices have largely proved misplaced so far. And speculation over the summer of a Fed pivot was dramatically shut down by hawkish comments from Fed Chair Jerome Powell at Jackson Hole in August.

New York Fed President John Williams gave investors and traders similar reason to be cautious on Monday. He said that while tighter monetary policy has begun to reduce inflationary pressures, “our job is not yet done.”

The greenback’s weakness gave some relief to the euro and pound. The latter gained as much as 0.9% to climb past $1.14, its highest since Sept. 20, after crashing on concerns over the new government’s growth plans. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index has fallen more than 2% from a peak last week.

As the market bulls looks for signs that the worldwide wave of disruptive hikes is closer to the end than the beginning, the Reserve Bank of Australia offered one this week. It raised rates less than forecast -- a dovish surprise that ended a streak of outsized increases.

European central bankers have also sounded a note of caution. Bank of France Governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau said in an interview Tuesday that the ECB should continue raising interest rates by large increments at its meetings in October and December before reassessing and possibly shifting to a slower pace.

According to Morgane Delledonne, head of investment strategy for Europe at Global X ETFs, it’s hard to say now if we’re at peak rates, but the risks lean “to a dovish turn toward the end of the year rather than a hawkish surprise.”

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