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The bond market continues to sell off after the German pledge of massive spending

The bond market continues to sell off after the German pledge of massive spending

The world financial markets were still in a readjustment phase Thursday, after U.S. president Donald Trump's shakeup in the transatlantic relationship prompted a half-a trillion-euro shift to German defense and infrastructure expenditures. In about an hour, the European Central Bank is preparing to lower its interest rates once more.

This would normally be enough to distract traders. It was only one factor among many. A global bond market sale is still underway a day after Germany's 10-year Bund yield, a major driver for borrowing costs worldwide, saw its largest rise since the 1990s.

Bund yields are up 7 basis points to 2.85% after reaching as high as 2.929% Wednesday. The euro rested at a 4-month-high versus an deflated US dollar, while European stocks took a break after a 10% rise this year.

Jim Reid of Deutsche Bank said that the Bund yield spike on Wednesday was the largest move since German unification.

This is a seismic change of epic proportions, and only nimble and fast-money investors have responded thus far.

Overnight, the global implications became apparent.

The yield on Japan's 10-year bond, another important driver of borrowing costs worldwide, has reached a 16-year high. In early U.S. trade, the yield on U.S. Treasury notes was also rising despite bets that more Federal Reserve rate reductions would follow recent patchy U.S. data.

The focus remained on global trade after the United States imposed 25% tariffs on imports of goods from Mexico and Canada on Tuesday, along with new duties on Chinese products.

White House said Wednesday that Mexican and Canadian automakers will be exempted for one month from their respective countries' tariffs as long as they comply with existing free-trade rules.

Wall Street futures predicted that the S&P 500 index would fall again when trading resumes. The S&P 500 index has been in the red this year after a difficult run that saw it fall eight times in the last ten sessions.

MSCI's broadest Asia-Pacific share index outside Japan closed at 1.25% higher, while Tokyo's Nikkei ended 0.8% higher.

China's blue chip index grew another 1.4%, while Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index soared over 3%. It reached its highest level in three years. This is a significant world market-topping surge of 20% by 2025.

RESPONSE OF THE ECB

At 1315 GMT, the ECB was expected to cut interest rates. This is due to the massive rearmament in Germany and Europe. After President Donald Trump suspended military aid to Kyiv earlier this week, European leaders held an emergency meeting on support for Ukraine in Brussels.

The euro was unchanged at $1.08 and just shy of the four-month high it reached in early Asian trading. The euro is set to rise by more than 4% in the coming week, which would be its best performance since March 2009.

Julien Lafargue is the chief market strategist of Barclays Private Bank. He said that this (ECB meeting) could be very exciting given the current circumstances.

Lafargue stated that the bank is close to reaching the "neutral" interest rate level after its recent cuts. Christine Lagarde, however, will be asked how the ECB plans to respond to Europe's increased defence spending.

Gold prices in commodities were slightly lower, at $2,904 an ounce, as traders awaited the U.S. Non-Farm Payrolls Report on Friday to get hints on the Federal Reserve’s policy direction.

After a week of tumbling, oil prices are now trying to recover. This is due to a large increase in U.S. crude stockpiles, OPEC+'s plans to boost output, and U.S. Tariffs on important oil supplies.

Brent futures hovered at $69.7 per barrel, close to the over three-year-low touched on Wednesday.

(source: Reuters)