ors are trimming longer-run inflation risk faster than they’re changing their view of the European Central Bank’s next move. Rate expectations have softened: after last week’s quarter-point hike, investors now lean toward just one more ECB increase this year, even as ECB chief economist Philip Lane said the bank would stay “proactive” on inflation. The US backdrop matters because it anchors global bond pricing. With hiring still strong, unemployment at 4.3%, and inflation above the Fed’s 2% target, many analysts expect the Fed to keep rates steady and focus on any shift in its guidance – plus what Warsh emphasizes in his first press conference.
Why should I care?
For markets: Bunds at 2.9295% while the Schatz holds 2.5853% is the key signal.
When 10-year Bund yields fall but two-year yields don’t, it usually means the market is getting more comfortable about medium-term inflation, not suddenly convinced the ECB is about to pivot. That distinction can shape who benefits most: “peripheral” bonds like Italy’s often outperform when investors expect easier policy, because that typically narrows the extra yield investors demand to hold them. Italy’s 10-year yield at 3.6383% and the BTP–Bund spread just below 70 basis points suggest the rally is being driven more by the long end than by a wholesale rethink of near-term ECB hikes. If that front end starts to follow the long end lower, peripheral spreads tend to have more room to tighten.
