World

Trump tariff shift calms European bond market

That has helped ⁠at least to put a floor under euro zone bond prices.

Euro zone bonds steadied on Thursday with longer-dated bond yields dropping slightly relative ​to shorter-dated ones after an easing in geopolitical tensions and Japanese bond market turmoil.

A plunge in Japanese ⁠bonds, as well as U.S. President Donald Trump’s threats to impose tariffs as leverage to seize Greenland contributed ⁠to a ‌global bond selloff on Tuesday, particularly in longer-dated bonds. However, Trump abruptly changed stance and Japanese government bonds have also rallied for the last two sessions.

That has helped ⁠at least to put a floor under euro zone bond prices.

GERMANY’S 10-YEAR YIELD HEADS FOR FALL AFTER FIVE INCREASES

Germany’s 10-year yield, the euro zone benchmark, was down just over one basis point at 2.86%, in what would be its first fall after five straight ⁠sessions of increases. Yields on super-long 30-year ​German debt, which had risen more sharply earlier in the week, fell around 2 bps to 3.49%. while the two-year ‍yield was up one basis point at 2.09%

Those “bull flattening” moves in market parlance are a reversal of the “bear steepening” situation ​earlier in the week when longer-dated yields rose while shorter-dated ones held steady or even fell, as worries about the impact of U.S. tariffs and a possible response by the EU weighed. The de-escalation over tariffs means “concerns are dialled back on euro zone inflation and GDP growth. This neutralises the ‘bear steepening’ trades in Treasuries and (German) Bunds,” analysts at Societe Generale wrote in a note.

A less tumultuous Japanese government bond market added to the calmer mood. Super-long-dated Japanese government bond yields dropped around 6 basis points on expectations that the finance ministry could take some measures to contain further rises in ⁠yields.

Other euro zone bonds slightly outperformed the German benchmark on ‌Thursday, again reversing the moves earlier in the week. French and Italian 10-year yields were each down around 2 basis points each at 3.51%. Euro zone markets saw little immediate impact from sharp ‌moves higher in British ⁠government bond yields on speculation Andy Burnham, a rival to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, would return to the ⁠British parliament.

© ZAWYA

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

Global economic outlook hangs in balance between geopolitical headwinds and AI boost, WEF Chief Economists’ Outlook warns

Nearly nine in ten chief economists surveyed expect global growth to weaken over the next…

17 hours ago

Availability, accessibility, affordability of quality food are vital for food security, says FAO

The Director-General emphasised that the “Four Levels of Food” provide a crucial roadmap for enhancing…

17 hours ago

Global economic outlook hangs in balance between geopolitical headwinds and AI boost, WEF Chief Economists’ Outlook warns

Chief economists already rank the current closure duration of the Strait of Hormuz as significantly…

18 hours ago

South Asia opens up: How trade reforms impact households and sectors

Over the next decade, about 280 million people will come of working age in South Asia.…

18 hours ago

Can we even measure progress? The state of development data

Imagine you’ve just been appointed Minister of Finance. Tomorrow morning, you must decide where to…

18 hours ago

Frontier market economies: Seven insights on global financial integration and rising debt

Over the next quarter-century, today's frontier markets are projected to add more individuals to the…

18 hours ago