Alarm
over bond yield fall
THE
collapse in yields on bonds sold by so-called safe countries such as
Australia, Germany and the US in recent days has put investors on
edge due to fears the global economy is again entering the danger
zone of the financial crisis.
SMH,
2
June, 2012
The
rapid falls have delivered the strongest message yet from the market
to the Reserve Bank of Australia to make a decisive cut to interest
rates when its board meets to discuss cash rates on Tuesday.
Australian
government borrowing costs continued to push record lows yesterday as
investors piled in amid concerns Europe's problems have hit a tipping
point.
Traders
interpreted the falls on bond markets as saying there is a high
chance of global contagion from the sovereign debt and banking
pressures in Europe. German and US bonds, countries that also have a
AAA credit rating, also fell to fresh lows.
''It's
an astonishing move,'' said George Boubouras, the head of investment
strategy and consulting at UBS, of the bond market moves.
''The
bond market is telling us that cash rates must come down and cash
rates must come down quicker than the RBA are comfortable with.''
Bonds
are often viewed as an indicator of the direction of equity markets.
When equity markets are healthy, yields on lower risk bonds are high,
but this is reversed in times of volatility as investors look for
somewhere safe to park their money.
For
most of the past decade bond markets flew under the radar while
equity markets were booming. But a collapse in yields in early 2008
foreshadowed a shock to global equity markets.
Interest
rate futures now point to an even-money bet that the RBA will match
May's 50 basis point cut and reduce its cash rate to 3.25 per cent -
leaving it not far off the lows during the global financial crisis.
However,
most economists believe the RBA will take a more cautious approach
and push through a series of 25 basis point cuts over a period of
months.
The
chief economist at Commonwealth Bank, Michael Blythe, believes the
RBA will hold its nerve with softer cuts.
''We
are reluctant to endorse the aggressive rate cut profile evident in
market pricing due to the need for a central bank to be prudent and
retain the ability for a more aggressive rate response if something
really does go wrong offshore,'' he said.
The
yield on Australia's 10-year note was yesterday trading at 2.85 per
cent.
US
Treasury 10-year yields dropped to a low of 1.53 per cent yesterday,
while similar-maturity German bunds touched a record level of 1.199
per cent.
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