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Euro zone's negative-yielding debt pile has almost disappeared

Published 10/03/2022, 07:23 AM
Updated 10/03/2022, 10:04 AM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Euro and Swiss Franc notes are seen in this illustration picture in Lausanne August 9, 2011. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo

By Dhara Ranasinghe

LONDON (Reuters) - The pile of negative-yielding euro zone government bonds is close to disappearing, Tradeweb showed on Monday, the latest sign that bond yields are firmly on an upward trajectory as major central banks ramp up rate hikes to contain inflation.

In Germany, the euro zone's benchmark bond issuer, two-year yields rose 58 basis points in September and are up more than 200 bps for the year.

Europe's decade-long experiment with negative interest rates ended last month when the Swiss National Bank raised its key rate back to positive territory.

Roughly 260 billion euros ($254 bln) of euro zone government bonds carried negative yields as of end-September, Tradeweb said, down from around 542 billion euros at end-August. All of the bonds still carrying a negative yield are inflation-linked.

Negative-yielding bonds made up 3.2% of a total market worth around eight trillion euros on the Tradeweb platform, versus almost 7% in August. The September figure was the lowest since at least 2016, when Tradeweb started compiling the data for Reuters.

ING's senior rates strategist Antoine Bouvet said the drop was no surprise given that central banks, except in Japan, had moved away from negative or zero interest rate policy.

"There is also the global bond market selloff pushing yields higher, helped by central banks keen to reduce the size of their bond portfolio," said Bouvet.

"And it makes sense, we have double digit or near double-digit inflation making low-yielding bonds look inconsistent with inflation."

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Europe's negative-yielding debt pool made up as much as three quarters of the sovereign debt market in late 2020, as the fallout of the COVID-19 pandemic dealt a blow to the economy and kept interest rates near record lows.

Markets are pricing in another big hike from the ECB later in October after it delivered its first-ever 75 bps rate hike last month. Data on Friday showed euro zone inflation hit 10% in September -- a new record high.

Negative-yielding bonds https://graphics.reuters.com/EUROPE-ECONOMY/NEGATIVERATES/zdpxolxajvx/chart.png

Latest comments

ECB has long way to go. 10 percent inflation and trivial rate of interest do no make sense.
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