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Euro zone yields little changed, Middle East, Fed meeting in focus

Euro zone yields little changed, Middle East, Fed meeting in focus

Investors waited for the U.S. Federal Reserve policy meeting this week to assess the impact of the Middle East war on inflation and growth.

Overnight, Iranian missiles hit Israel as part of a wave retaliatory strikes by Tehran in response to Israel's preemptive attacks last week against its nuclear and missile programs.

At this week's G7 summit, world leaders expressed concern that the conflict between two old enemies could spark a wider regional conflict.

Analysts say that a rise in the price of oil will cause inflation. However, there are downside risks to the economy.

Brent crude futures fluctuated on Monday after a 7% rise on Friday.

The yields on German 10-year government bonds were unchanged at 2.54% - 2.53%. They had been 2.422% last Friday, their lowest level since March 3. The yields of the two-year Schatz bond were down by 0.5 basis points at 1.85%.

Market pricing for the European Central Bank's depo rate in December was at 1.75%. This is the same level as after the ECB meeting early June.

This week, the Bank of England and Bank of Japan will also be announcing their monetary policy decisions.

Investors are focusing on the central bank's new projections.

The spread between Italian and German 10-year bond yields was 92 basis points, down 1 bps. Last week, it reached 84.20 basis points (bps), its highest since March 2015.

(source: Reuters)