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Germany’s 10-year swap spread hits lowest in 20 years as government collapses



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By Stefano Rebaudo

Nov 7 (Reuters) -Inflation concerns and worries about increasing Bund supply after the government collapse in Germany triggered a sharp rise in euro area yields and led Germany's 10-year swap spread to hit its lowest level more than 20 years.

Analysts expect new U.S. policies after Donald Trump was elected president to result in more inflation as additional tariffs raise prices for consumers and businesses, which will also affect the euro zone.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz sacked his finance minister on Wednesday and paved the way for a snap election, triggering political chaos in Europe's largest economy hours after Donald Trump won the U.S. presidential election.

Germany's 10-year yield DE10YT=RR, the euro area's benchmark, rose 9 basis points to 2.48%, after hitting 2.498%, its highest since mid-July.

The selloff in German assets was in line with their peers as yields in French OATs FR10YT=RR, Italian BTPs IT10YT=RR and Spanish Bonos ES10YT=RR rose about 9 bps to 3.25%, 3.81% and 3.23% respectively, leaving spreads roughly unchanged.

Investors worry about uncertainty over the budget and a possible increase of government bonds supply.

"The quantitative tightening of the ECB and fears of increasing supply due to the political crisis in Germany triggered the recent moves in the asset swap spread (ASW), which dropped in the negative territory in 10y tenors," said Hauke Siemssen, rate strategist at Commerzbank.

Germany's 10-year ASW was last down 6 bps at -5 bps after hitting -6.70 bps, its lowest level on record.

It was at around 23 bps in early October and at about 50 bps at the end of 2023.


SWAP SPREADS

Swap spreads, the difference between the 10-year yield and the 10-year swap rate, can be a reflection of risk appetite, as well as a market gauge of an issuer's credit quality.

Analysts said the drop in the spread was also down to the effect of European Central Bank quantitative tightening, which reduced the demand for sovereign bonds across the euro area.

"The main market focus is currently on the prospects of increased debt issuance to finance a package to revive the German economy," said Danske Bank Analyst Rune Thyge Johansen.

The 2-year yield DE2YT=RR, which is more sensitive to European Central Bank rate expectations, rose 6 bps to 2.25% after falling 14.5 bps the day before.

The German yield curve steepened further with the gap between 10-year and 2-year yields DE2DE10=RR rising up to 26.8 bps, a fresh 2-year high.

"Fears of long-standing inflation in the U.S. and its impact in the euro area are driving (long-dated) yields higher today with a further steepening of the yield curves," said Massimiliano Maxia, senior fixed income specialist at Allianz Global Investors, arguing investors expect Republicans to have a majority in Congress.

Republicans won control of the U.S. Senate. If they ultimately prevail in the House, they will be able to dictate the agenda in Washington, helping Trump deliver on his promise to slash taxes and restrict immigration for at least the next two years until the 2026 midterm elections.



Reporting by Stefano Rebaudo, editing by Alex Richardson

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