German two-year yields set for best month since April as strong euro muddies ECB path

German two-year government ‌bond yields were set for their largest monthly drop since last April on Friday, driven lower by investors betting the European Central Bank will factor in the deflationary drag from a stronger euro as it considers monetary policy.


Reuters | Updated: 30-01-2026 22:09 IST | Created: 30-01-2026 22:09 IST
German two-year yields set for best month since April as strong euro muddies ECB path

German two-year government ‌bond yields were set for their largest monthly drop since last April on Friday, driven lower by investors betting the European Central Bank will factor in the deflationary drag from a stronger euro as it considers monetary policy. The euro hit a 4-1/2-year-high ⁠against the dollar on Tuesday after President Donald Trump said the U.S. currency's value was "great", when asked whether he thought it had declined too much.

German 2-year yields, which are more sensitive to expectations for policy rates, were up 0.5 basis points at 2.06% and on track for a 6.5-bp weekly decline, the biggest since October. In January, they ​have fallen by 6 bps, the largest monthly fall since April last year. Money markets priced in around a 30% chance of a rate cut in September, up ‍from less than 10% a week ago, while indicating a 20% probability of a rate hike in April 2027, down from 50%.

ECB POLICY MEETING IN FOCUS Investors are awaiting next week's ECB monetary policy meeting.

"Policy rates might be unchanged again in February, but the ECB has no shortage of issues to ponder," said Mark Wall, chief European economist at Deutsche Bank Research. "Is a 'Second China Shock' a more significant concern ⁠to Europe than ‌U.S. tariffs? And is currency stability ⁠becoming a challenge to the smooth transmission of monetary policy?"

Investors have been worried that the strength of the euro could amplify the deflationary impact of China's export machine and become the catalyst that jolts the ‍ECB out of its "good place" and into further interest rate cuts. Economists also flagged that geopolitical risks remain a major theme this year, meaning the ECB has to stay nimble and able ​to respond quickly.

Long-dated U.S. Treasuries fell on Friday, with benchmark 10-year yields up 3 bps at 4.26%, after Trump nominated former Federal Reserve Governor Kevin Warsh ⁠to head the U.S. central bank. DATA CONFIRM EURO ZONE RESILIENCE

Germany's 10-year government bond yield, the euro zone's benchmark, rose 1.5 bps to 2.85%. Borrowing costs were little changed after solid economic data on Friday showed that euro ⁠zone economies grew at a modest but steady pace, while inflation stood at 2% in Germany's most populous state, North Rhine-Westphalia.

"We have seen some temporary good performances in Germany quickly reverse in the past few years, so the big question now is whether this will be repeated in the coming quarters," said Franziska Palmas, senior ⁠Europe economist at Capital Economics. The 30-year yield was up 1.6 bps at 3.5%. It rose to 3.556% in late December, its highest since summer 2011.

The yield ⁠gap between French government bonds and safe-haven Bunds - ‌a market gauge of the risk premium investors demand to hold French debt - widened to 58 bps after hitting a fresh 19-month low at 55.50 bps, on Monday. Italy's 10-year government bond yields rose 2 bps to 3.47%. The gap versus Bunds was ⁠around 61 bps, after tightening to 53.50 in mid-January, its lowest level since August 2008.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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