- Germany's two-year government bond yield (DE2YT:RR) rose 3 basis points to 2.746%, significantly impacted by the geopolitical situation raising international oil prices to $120 per barrel. This yield indicator is heading for the ninth consecutive trading day of increases, reflecting how short-term funds are quickly pricing in future inflation risks.
- Data from the interest rate swap market shows that traders generally expect the European Central Bank (ECB) to keep the benchmark rate unchanged at today's meeting, but the forward curve has fully priced in at least three rate hikes for the year, with a 50% implied probability of a fourth hike.
- Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Powell signaled a caution against inflation rebounds in his last news conference of his eight-year term. Coupled with the widening spread of 85 basis points between Italian 10-year bonds (IT10Y) and German bonds, this has collectively increased the valuation correction pressure in the global sovereign bond market.
Revaluation of Short-end Yield Curve Pricing
In the global fixed income market, short-term bonds, which are most sensitive to changes in inflation and monetary policy margins, are undergoing a dramatic repricing. The yield on Germany's two-year government bond hit a new high since March 30, with a cumulative rise of 74 basis points since the end of February. This trend is not isolated, as short-term interest rates in Europe's core and peripheral countries have all risen simultaneously. Italy's two-year yield (IT2YT:RR) rose by 87 basis points during the same period, while the UK's two-year government bond (GB2YT:RR) increased by a full 100 basis points. This cross-market short-end yield resonance indicates that investors are significantly scaling back their previous optimistic expectations for a global central bank easing cycle, incorporating higher inflation rates and a longer tightening cycle back into asset pricing models.
Geopolitical Risk Premium and Imported Inflation
The recent overall upward shift in sovereign bond yield curves is primarily driven by uncertainty on the energy supply side. Market reports suggest that the US is evaluating potential geopolitical intervention measures in key regions of the Middle East, a variable that has directly led to a sharp rise in international crude oil prices, fluctuating around the critical $120 per barrel psychological threshold. For the Eurozone, which is highly dependent on energy imports, soaring oil prices will directly transmit through the Import Price Index (IPI) to the Producer Price Index (PPI), delaying the process of core Consumer Price Index (CPI) decline. This imported inflation, triggered by external geopolitical risks, greatly restricts the European Central Bank's (ECB) operational space in monetary policy.
Weighing the European Central Bank's Policy Path
With high energy prices as a backdrop, the European Central Bank (ECB) faces the dual challenge of preventing inflation expectations from becoming unanchored and maintaining fragile economic growth. Market consensus expects no action at this week's meeting, but the tone of the forward guidance will become the trading focus. Commerzbank strategist Eric Lim points out that the current institutional baseline assumption is that the ECB will start a rate hike cycle as early as June. However, if the transmission effects of energy prices are within control and do not trigger widespread wage-price spirals, the central bank may choose to observe after one hike. This data-dependent policy path means that inflation and economic momentum data in the coming months will trigger higher bond market volatility.
Transatlantic Monetary Policy Spillover Effects
In addition to the Eurozone's internal fundamentals, the Federal Reserve's (Fed) policy stance also exerts a significant spillover effect on the European bond market. The Fed maintained the status quo in its latest rate decision, but internal hawkish voices have strengthened, with four committee members voting against language in the policy statement implying an easing stance. This shows the decision-makers' concern over the uncertainty in the inflation decline path. Powell's statements at his last conference before stepping down dispelled market expectations of a rapid pivot by the Fed. Dynamic adjustments in the US-China and US-Europe spreads accelerate global fund reallocations, further increasing the term premium in the European bond market, leading to a systemic rise in financing costs across Eurozone countries.




