【free party line number bay area】The unexpected moneymaker in 2018: euro zone government bonds

Comprehensive 2024-09-29 12:22:30 88

(Repeats Monday's story with no changes to text)

* Politics and pessimism on growth drive bonds yet again

【free party line number bay area】The unexpected moneymaker in 2018: euro zone government bonds


* No QE,free party line number bay area no problem, as Bund yields end the year down

【free party line number bay area】The unexpected moneymaker in 2018: euro zone government bonds


* Portugal and Spain tell strong recovery stories

【free party line number bay area】The unexpected moneymaker in 2018: euro zone government bonds


By Abhinav Ramnarayan


LONDON, Dec 31 (Reuters) - Economic optimists have for years been misguidedly predicting the twilight of the boring, safety-first bond market. And the year gone by was another one that proved them wrong, particularly in the euro zone.


Investors who bought government bonds from euro zone countries -- with the admittedly large exception of Italy -- at the start of 2018 booked a healthy profit if they held them to the end of the year.


Even with the European Central Bank dialling back its stimulus, the dulling of a once-rosy growth outlook and political tensions made "boring" look attractive again.


Demand was stoked by Italy's wrangling with Brussels over its budget plan, uncertainty over Britain's impending exit from the the European Union, and global trade tension.


This brought an astonishing 3.36 percent return on German 10-year bonds, defying start-of-year predictions of a return around 1 percent - after two years near zero because of massive ECB bond buying. And those bonds end the year yielding just 0.25 percent.


Even across the Atlantic, where the U.S. Federal Reserve hiked rates four times in 2018, the return on 10-year U.S. Treasury yields is set to end only marginally in the red.


But if German bonds benefited from investors dashing for safety, the story has been more positive elsewhere in the bloc.


Leading the pack is Portugal, its 10-year government bonds returning a stellar 4.6 percent, with the Spanish equivalent a shade behind at 4.3 percent.


"The Portuguese economy recovered to its pre-crisis peak in real terms in the second quarter of 2018," said Evan Wohlmann, an analyst at Moody's, which in October became the third ratings agency to lift Portugal into investment grade.


Challenges remain, but he said reforms had made that economy more resilient.


Other peripheral debt, such as that of Greece, also notched up positive returns.


Returns on French 10-year debt were curbed by a late selloff after President Emmanuel Macron boosted spending to quell "yellow vest" protests, but still returned just over 2 percent.


Of course there is an exception -- Italy.


Rome's anti-establishment coalition triggered a selloff of Italian debt by raising doubts over Italy's future in the euro zone, and then setting spending plans at odds with Brussels.


Yet Rome did finally agree on a budget plan with the European Commission, leading 10-year yields to fall 44 basis points in December.


Story continues


As a result, bonds that in October looked set to end the year 10 percent down finished only 1.78 percent in the red.


(Reporting by Abhinav Ramnarayan; Editing by Kevin Liffey)


View comments


本文地址:http://lout.fabrikasi.net/news/056d199942.html
版权声明

本文仅代表作者观点,不代表本站立场。
本文系作者授权发表,未经许可,不得转载。

全站热门

Integrated Passive Devices Market revenue to cross USD 2 Billion by 2026: Global Market Insights, Inc.

FOREX-Dollar scales 10-week high vs yen on upbeat U.S. GDP

Why Prana Biotechnology Stock Is Skyrocketing Today

Wesco International (WCC) Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call Transcript

Americans See Record Fall in Consumer Spending, Savings Soar

FOREX-Aussie, kiwi steady as dovish Fed keeps lid on dollar

Is CyberOptics Corporation’s (NASDAQ:CYBE) Balance Sheet Strong Enough To Weather A Storm?

PE's lack of liquidity comes into focus as public, private markets converge

友情链接