- Short-term sovereign bond yields in the Eurozone continue to face upward pressure, with the yield on Germany's two-year government bond (DE2YT=RR) rising by 1.8 basis points to 2.59%, marking a second consecutive day of gains. This reflects the direct transmission of persistently high energy prices to short-term inflation expectations.
- UK gilts have shown relative resilience following the resolution of local political uncertainties, with the yield on the 10-year government bond (GB10YT=RR) falling by 5 basis points to 4.893%, and the 30-year government bond (GB30YT=RR) yield also retreating by 7 basis points to 5.57%.
- There has been a significant revision in the monetary market's expectations of the European Central Bank's (ECB) policy path. Traders are currently pricing in a 57% probability that the ECB will keep the benchmark interest rate unchanged at the June meeting, with previous macro bets on further rate hikes receding.
Structural Changes in the Yield Curve
The current European sovereign bond market is digesting complex macroeconomic factors. Against the backdrop of energy premiums triggered by US-Iran geopolitical tensions, short-term bond yields are significantly more sensitive than long-term ones. The rapid recovery of Germany's two-year government bond yield after previous declines indicates heightened awareness of short-term inflation stickiness. Meanwhile, the yield on Germany's ten-year government bond (.DE10T=RR), a benchmark for long-term borrowing costs in the Eurozone, remains stable at the 3% mark. The changes in the long-short yield spread suggest that the market's expectations for long-term economic growth are relatively stable, without systemic panic selling due to sudden geopolitical events. Additionally, spreads in peripheral countries remain stable, with Italy's ten-year government bond (IT10Y) yield slightly retreating by 2 basis points to 3.729%, indicating that liquidity transmission within the Eurozone remains healthy.
The Tug of War Between Macroeconomic Fundamentals and Energy Premiums
Concerns on the supply side of the crude oil market are currently the core variable suppressing bullish sentiment in bonds. Brent crude oil (Brent:CO1) briefly surged by 3% during trading, last reported at $110.48 per barrel, maintaining above the $100 threshold. This imported inflationary pressure directly disrupts the European Central Bank's disinflation process. However, the latest US non-farm employment report provided some emotional relief to the market. The data showed that job growth in the US exceeded expectations in April and March, but wage growth was moderate. This combination effectively alleviated deep concerns among macro hedge funds that high energy costs would quickly erode global economic fundamentals and trigger stagflation, allowing US and European long-term bonds to stabilize during Friday's trading session.
Marginal Adjustments in Central Bank Policy Expectations
After the Federal Reserve (Fed), European Central Bank (ECB), and Bank of England (BOE) all maintained current interest rate levels last week, market pricing logic quickly shifted to the next policy window. According to implied probabilities from overnight index swaps and other monetary market tools, expectations for the ECB's actions in June have shifted from aggressive rate hikes to holding steady, with the probability of maintaining policy unchanged rising to 57%. In the UK market, Peel Hunt's chief economist Kallum Pickering noted that the ruling party's losses in local elections have been fully absorbed by asset prices. The statement by UK Prime Minister Starmer to remain in office calmed short-term political risk premiums, prompting UK long and short-term government bonds to outperform other major European counterparts driven by safe-haven buying. If energy prices do not see a substantial decline subsequently, the policy response function of European central banks will face a longer cycle of testing as they balance inflation stickiness and economic momentum.




