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    Home > Investing > Bond markets left smarting from worst rout in years as reflation goes global
    Investing

    Bond markets left smarting from worst rout in years as reflation goes global

    Bond markets left smarting from worst rout in years as reflation goes global

    Published by linker 5

    Posted on February 26, 2021

    Featured image for article about Investing

    By Dhara Ranasinghe

    LONDON (Reuters) – From the United States to Germany and Australia, government borrowing costs on Friday were set to end February with their biggest monthly rises in years as expectations for a post-pandemic ignition of inflation gained a life of their own.

    Australia’s 10-year bond yield and Britain’s 30-year yields were set for their biggest monthly jump since the 2009 global financial crisis. Long-dated New Zealand yields were flirting with their biggest monthly surge since 1994.

    The move, which began in the U.S. Treasury market at the start of the year on prospects for a huge fiscal boost and economic recovery, has spread globally.

    Even after a Friday respite from this week’s brutal drubbing, Australia’s 10-year yield is up 70 basis points in February and New Zealand’s 10-year yield is up almost 77 bps.

    (Graphic: Australia’s 10-year bond yield set for biggest monthly rise since 2009: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/xklpyoogmpg/AU2602.png)

    Australia’s 10-year bond yield has soared almost 40 bps this week alone to 1.8%, its biggest weekly jump since 2013 .

    And as three-year bond yields moved above their 0.1% target, the Reserve Bank of Australia on Friday made an unscheduled offer to buy A$3 billion ($2.35 billion) of three-year bonds, on top of a similar amount on Thursday, to calm markets.

    “Given how expensive bonds have been, meaning yields have been depressed, it was expected that when the selloff came it would move at great speed,” said Seema Shah, chief strategist at Principal Global Investors.

    “This is a move driven by the U.S. and that has fed out to other markets, but large elements of the selloff in recent days are not just about the improvement in growth fundamentals but technical factors, too.”

    (Graphic: Monthly change in bond yields: US, UK, Germany: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/dgkplzzwepb/febyields2602.png)

    For the United States and some European markets, the bond selloff was on the scale of late 2016, when Donald Trump’s election as U.S. President last triggered so-called reflation bets.

    U.S. 10-year bond yields, up more than 35 bps this month and near one-year highs above 1.45%, are set for their biggest monthly jump since November 2016.

    Britain’s 10-year bond yield, up 45 bps in February, was also set for its biggest monthly jump since 2016. Thirty-year yields headed for their biggest monthly leap since 2009 after rising 48 bps.

    Rising government bond yields pose a challenge for central banks trying to steer economies through the COVID-19 crisis. They feed through to the real economy by raising the rates at which banks lend and consumers borrow, thereby tightening financial conditions.

    Japan, which targets long-dated bond yields at around 0%, has seen 10-year yields rise almost 10 bps this month to 0.15%. That puts it on track for the biggest monthly gain since March 2020, the peak of the COVID-19-induced market turmoil.

    In the euro area, where German Bund yields were set for their biggest monthly jump in three years, the European Central Bank has said it is monitoring the rise in rates closely.

    “Seen from a fundamental angle, the ultra-low yields of 2020 made much less sense than the less depressed yields to which markets are heading now,” said Berenberg chief economist Holger Schmieding.

    Schmieding said 10-year U.S. yields were likely to rise to 2% by the end of the year as investors price in strong growth and a rebound in underlying inflation. German Bund yields could reach 0%, “with risks tilted to the upside.”

    (Graphic: Where will bond yields end this year?: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/mkt/qmyvmwwgwvr/DEUS2602.png)

    (Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe; Editing by Tommy Wilkes and Larry King)

     

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