Euro zone bond yields hover near recent highs, await US inflation data

The yield on Germany's 10-year bond, the euro zone's benchmark, was last up 1 basis point (bp) at 2.64%. It rose 24 bps last week and hit a four-month high of 2.679% on Monday in a sign that investors increasingly believe central bankers when they say interest rates are going to remain high for some time.


Reuters | Washington DC | Updated: 11-07-2023 21:29 IST | Created: 11-07-2023 21:00 IST
Euro zone bond yields hover near recent highs, await US inflation data
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Euro zone government bond yields hovered at elevated levels on Tuesday after a sharp rise last week, as investors waited for the following day's U.S. inflation data. The yield on Germany's 10-year bond, the euro zone's benchmark, was last up 1 basis point (bp) at 2.64%.

It rose 24 bps last week and hit a four-month high of 2.679% on Monday in a sign that investors increasingly believe central bankers when they say interest rates are going to remain high for some time. There was little in the way of economic data driving euro zone yields on Tuesday, analysts said.

A closely watched survey from Germany showed that investor morale in the euro zone's biggest economy fell more than expected in July, although the release had little impact on bond yields. The key event this week is the release of June's U.S. consumer price index (CPI) report on Wednesday, which is likely to influence the Federal Reserve's interest rate decision later this month.

"The CPI tomorrow, probably everyone's waiting for that, that is the key piece for the puzzle this week," said Lyn Graham-Taylor, senior rates strategist at Rabobank. Traders broadly expect the Fed to raise interest rates by another 25 bps to a range of between 5.25% and 5.50% on July 26.

The market thinks the European Central Bank has further to go to quell euro zone inflation. Rates are currently at 3.5% in the bloc, but pricing in derivatives markets shows traders expect them to rise to a peak of 4% or more by early next year. Expectations for higher interest rates have pushed up bond yields in recent weeks. Yields move inversely to prices.

Germany's 2-year yield, which is highly sensitive to interest rate expectations, hit a 15-year high of 3.393% last week, rising back above where they stood before yields plunged in response to the banking crisis in mid-March. The two-year yield was up 2.5 bps at 3.35% on Tuesday.

Meanwhile, Italy's 10-year yield was up 1 bp at 4.40%. Investors see the bond as the benchmark for the euro zone's more indebted countries. The closely watched gap between Italy and Germany's 10-year yields widened slightly to 174.5 bps.

Longer-dated yields rose more than those on shorter-dated bonds last week after a long period when the opposite dynamic dominated. Graham-Taylor said one driver of this could be "a bit of uncertainty premium because people don't know what's going on, so people are demanding a bit more yield on these long dates".

Data on Tuesday showed that British wages rose at the joint-highest rate on record in the three months to May, keeping the pressure on the Bank of England.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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