The Borneo Post (Sabah)

German bonds in demand as Pyongyang unveils missile plan

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LONDON: Europe’s top-rated German bond yield fell to a sixweek low as North Korea outlined detailed plans for a missile strike near the US territory of Guam.

While an investor panic that followed a war of words between Washington and Pyongyang on Wednesday appeared to abate slightly, demand remained firm for assets that tend to perform well in times of market stress, including German Bunds.

Analysts said yields, which move inversely to prices, could fall further even as central bankers in the United States talked of a tightening in monetary conditions that could jack up global interest rates.

Germany’s 10-year bond yield traded at 0.40 per cent on Thursday, the lowest since June 29, according to Tradeweb data.

US and British equivalent­s were also trading close to six-week lows.

“We would currently be careful with a whiff of risk aversion in the air and, by extension, also stay away from shorts in the rates market,” RBC’s global macro strategist Peter Schaffrik said.

“Bund (yields) might well move towards the 20bp area (0.20 per cent) again – particular­ly if risky assets start wobbling a bit.”

After President Donald Trump told North Korea that any threat to the United States would be met with “fire and fury”, Pyongyang on Thursday said it was finalising plans to fire four intermedia­te-range missiles over Japan to land 30-40 km (18-25 miles) from Guam.

North Korea regularly threatens to destroy the US, but Thursday’s report was unusual in its detail, leading some to speculate that Pyongyang was giving advance notice of changes to its missile programme rather than threatenin­g an attack.

The US has sought cooperatio­n from China, one of North Korea’s few allies, to help secure a common stance against the isolated state.

But Reuters on Thursday reported on a US naval operation in the South China Sea which could strain relations between the two global superpower­s.

Analysts at Mizuho and ING said Wednesday’s sharp moves in bond markets had been caused by speculativ­e trading in derivative­s markets rather than actual trading in the underlying assets.

“We therefore expect this outperform­ance from the Bund to be susceptibl­e to underperfo­rmance in the coming sessions, even if other ‘risk off’ measures stay unchanged,” Mizuho’s head of euro rates strategy Peter Chatwell said.

One factor that could push yields back up again is any tightening in monetary conditions in the US, the world’s largest economy.

Federal Reserve policymake­r Charles Evans said on Wednesday that low inflation would not stop the central bank from beginning to shrink its US$4.5 trillion balance sheet next month. — Reuters

We would currently be careful with a whiff of risk aversion in the air and, by extension, also stay away from shorts in the rates market. Peter Schaffrik, RBC global macro strategist

 ??  ?? A constructi­on site is pictured in Berlin, Germany, August 10. Europe’s top-rated German bond yield fell to a six-week low as North Korea outlined detailed plans for a missile strike near the US territory of Guam. — Reuters photo
A constructi­on site is pictured in Berlin, Germany, August 10. Europe’s top-rated German bond yield fell to a six-week low as North Korea outlined detailed plans for a missile strike near the US territory of Guam. — Reuters photo

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