Economic news

Euro Zone Bond Yields Soar as ECB Plots July Rate Hike

  • Peripheral bond yields up 12 to 20 bps
  • Euro rises but then falls in volatile trading
  • Stocks fall after hawkish tone in statement

LONDON, June 9 (Reuters) - Bond yields across southern Europe soared on Thursday after the European Central Bank signalled a string of interest rate hikes starting in July to tame stubbornly high inflation.

European stocks fell on confirmation that the ECB would end its Asset Purchase Programme, its main stimulus tool since the euro debt crisis.

Policymakers flagged a 25 bps move in July and said they may move again in September, possibly by a bigger margin. Money markets ramped up bets for ECB rate hikes and are now pricing in 145 basis points worth of increases in 2022 .

Italy's 10-year bond yield rose as much as 20 bps on the day and hit its highest level since 2018 at 3.715% , while Spanish, Portuguese and Greek yields rose 10-16 bps each.

German 10-year bond yields rose to the highest since July 2014 at 1.47% from around 1.37% earlier and two-year yields were up 7 bps at 0.78%.

In volatile trading, the euro initially rose but later fell as traders struggled to decide whether the ECB was sounding more hawkish than expected.

Analysts for the most part saw the statement as the ECB's attempt to catch up with other major central banks, which are already well along the rate-hike path.

"It is a hawkish pivot, what they are delivering now is not just one or two rate hikes but a clear message that they will have to get rates a lot higher over the coming quarters," said Marchel Alexandrovich, European economist at Saltmarsh Economics.

"She (ECB President Christine Lagarde) talks about gradualism but in reality there is not a lot in here that backs it up - the forecasts speak for themselves and that suggests a series of rate hikes," he added.

Others predicted the ECB would be unable to move aggressively given the headwinds facing economic growth and the fallout from the war in Ukraine.

Anna Stupnytska, global economist at Fidelity International, predicted the ECB would struggle to raise rates back into positive territory quickly, predicting "the tightening path will be less steep and shorter than what is currently implied by market pricing".

That is partly because of risks to weaker euro zone states, in particular Italy and Greece, from a rapid rise in borrowing costs.

Italian yields were set for their biggest one-day rise since late April, pushing the gap over German Bund yields to almost 227 bps -- its widest in almost a week .

Greek 10-year yields rose to 4.15%, the highest since 2020 . The Spanish 10-year yield climbedover 14 bps to 2.64% , its highest since 2014.

The euro STOXX index was last down 1.56%. Euro zone banks dropped 1.4%. The euro was last trading down 0.2% versus the dollar at $1.0694 and marginally lower against sterling .

Reporting by the London Markets Team Writing by Stefano Rebaudo and Tommy Wilkes Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Anil D'Silva

Source: Reuters


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