Euro zone bond yields were little changed on Thursday as markets eyed an expected interest rate cut from the European Central Bank later in the day.
With the ECB widely expected to cut rates by 25 bps to 2%, investors will focus on any indication of what comes after.
The market still anticipates at least one more cut by the end of the year, bringing the deposit facility rate to 1.75%, but it is factoring in only a 30% chance so far for a cut at the central bank’s next meeting in July.
“A downwardly revised inflation projection and a balance of risks around the growth outlook, perhaps more clearly pointing to the downside, would generally paint a dovish backdrop, but given the uncertain environment around trade specifically, one should not expect any concrete hints from President Lagarde,” analysts at ING wrote in a note to clients.
Germany’s 10-year yield, the benchmark for the euro area, was mostly flat at 2.52%.
It fell to its lowest since May 8 on Tuesday at 2.485%.
Germany’s policy-sensitive two-year yield was also unchanged at 1.79%, within its recent tight range.
The ECB has cut rates seven times in 13 months, as inflation eased from post-pandemic highs, as it sought to support a euro zone economy that was struggling even before US President Donald Trump’s erratic economic and trade policy came into the picture.
Euro zone bond yields hold steady, down from six-week high
Markets have been rattled since Trump announced a slate of tariffs on trading partners around the globe on April 2, only to pause some and declare new ones, pushing investors to look for alternatives to US assets.
Italy’s 10-year yield, the benchmark for the euro area periphery, slid 2 bps at 3.482%, leaving the gap between Italian and German yields at 93.6 basis points.