The Pak Banker

German bond yields at 7-month lows as stimulus hopes fade

- LONDON -REUTERS

German government bond yields fell to sevenmonth lows on Thursday as rising coronaviru­s cases in Europe raised concern that the prospect of more lockdowns would deal another body blow to the struggling euro zone economy. France imposed curfews while other European nations are closing schools, cancelling surgeries and enlisting student medics as overwhelme­d authoritie­s face the nightmare scenario of a COVID-19 resurgence at the onset of winter. [

In the United Kingdom, tighter COVID-19 lockdowns could be imposed on London and northern England by Prime Minister Boris Johnson's government on Thursday. "The prospect of more localised lockdowns would hurt economic activity when they are already struggling and that is weighing on the bond markets," said Justin Onuekwusi, portfolio manager at Legal & General Investment Management.

Yields on perceived safe-haven German government bonds for 10-year maturities fell more than 5 bps to -0.627%, the lowest since mid-March. Yields have fallen nearly 10 bps this week. The rally in core European government debt spread to other bond markets like France and Belgium where yields also fell to their lowest levels since March as authoritie­s prepare to lock down parts of their economies.

Even before the latest round of restrictio­ns, data this week showed the European economy was losing steam by the end of the third quarter. Germany will recover more slowly from the coronaviru­s pandemic than originally predicted, its leading economic research institutes forecast on Wednesday, while the euro zone's industrial production reading for August slowed sharply.

While new infections in emerging markets are starting to edge down, they have risen in advanced economies - developed markets now account for about 30% of new cases, compared to 25% a month ago, Capital Economics said. Italy, Croatia, Slovenia and

Bosnia reported record figures of new daily infections. The risk-off mood in global bond markets reverberat­ed widely with a rally in peripheral European government debt markets including Italy stalling on Thursday as investors took profits.

Italian 10-year bond yields were trading at 0.70% after falling to a record low at 0.634% on Wednesday. That yanked the spread between German and Italian bonds to more than 130 bps on Thursday from 119 bps in the previous session.

Spanish yields also firmed as the government said it would issue debt to compensate for any potential delay in the approval and disburseme­nt of EU rescue funds. Elsewhere, U.S. Treasury yields dived to a two-week low of 0.6960% as the prospects of fresh U.S. stimulus before the Nov. 3 presidenti­al election faded.

Downbeat comments from U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin that a stimulus deal was unlikely before the vote provided one of several reasons for profit-taking.

 ?? FLORIDA
-REUTERS ?? US Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden delivers remarks on a Vision for Older Americans event at the Southwest Focal Point Community Center, in Pembroke Pines, Florida, US.
FLORIDA -REUTERS US Democratic presidenti­al candidate Joe Biden delivers remarks on a Vision for Older Americans event at the Southwest Focal Point Community Center, in Pembroke Pines, Florida, US.

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