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Euro zone yields edge higher on debt supply, economic green shoots

September 08, 2020 00:00:00


LONDON, Sept 07 (Reuters): Euro zone bond yields rose on Monday on signs of an improved global economy and ahead of a week of healthy supply, as countries get to grips with increased borrowing requirements to help fund the response to the Covid-19 crisis.

China's exports rose the most in nearly 1-1/2 years in August, data showed, a sign that more of its trading partners - such as the euro zone - are reopening their economies and are on the mend.

This follows last week's key German industrial production rise of 1.2 per cent, a sign that Europe's "engine room" is recovering from the depths of recession.

"Even if industrial production remains unchanged for the next two months, the quarterly growth rate would still be around 10 per cent. This illustrates that a strong rebound in the German economy is in the making," said Carsten Brzeski, ING's chief economist for the euro zone.

In addition, more than 17 billion euros of supply is due later this week as Austria, the Netherlands, Germany, Portugal and Italy all are due to sell debt in auctions, while Ireland and Spain are also potential issuers, according to analysts.

Euro zone government bond yields rose between one and three basis points across the board, with benchmark German 10-year bond yields rising four basis points to -0.44 per cent at one stage before settling around -0.47 per cent, still slightly higher on the day.

Italian bond yields were higher across the curve, with the 10-year yield up a basis point at 1.09 per cent.

The upward move in yields could be checked closer to a European Central Bank meeting on Thursday, if the signs are that policymakers are unimpressed by the indications of an economic recovery and flag further stimulus.

"We see the likelihood for a strongly dovish tone to triumph, in which flexibility to increase the PEPP envelope will be the most attractive policy lever," analysts at Mizuho said in a note, referring to the ECB's Pandemic Emergency Purchasing Programme to buy bonds during the coronavirus crisis.


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