Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Europe Bond Yields - The Great Divide

Updated July 20, 2012


As someone who follows the world's bond market relatively closely, over recent months, I have noticed an interesting trend in European bond yields and have seen yields that I would never have thought possible.  I'm going to let several charts do my writing for me, noting that all charts follow the changes in yield over the past 3 years.

Here is the chart showing the yield for 2 year Portuguese bonds:



Here is the chart showing the yield for 2 year Irish bonds:



Here is the chart showing the yield for 2 year Italian bonds:



Here is the chart showing the yield profile for 2 year Greek bonds:



Lastly, here is the chart showing the yield for 2 year Spanish bonds:



Now, let's look at the contrasting yields on several non-PIIGS European bonds:

Here is the chart showing the yield profile for 2 year German bonds which actually went negative in late May/early June and where they have been for two weeks:



Here is the chart showing the yield profile for 2 year Swiss bonds which are currently well into negative territory where they have been for weeks:



Here is the chart showing the yield profile for 2 year Danish bonds which are also in negative yield territory:



Lastly, here is the chart showing the yield profile for 2 year Finish bonds which are sitting at a tiny fraction of a percentage above zero:



If we exclude Ireland, there seems to be a very strong north-south split.  It's also interesting to see investors' desperate "flight to security"; their willingness to pay to have a nation hold onto their funds for two years and get less back in the end is nothing short of astonishing!

Here is a chart showing the debt, debt-to-GDP profiles for the aforementioned countries current to the end of 2011 according to Eurostat (except Switzerland as linked here):


Germany is definitely getting a pass on its high debt level because of its strong economy, however, that could change if interest rates rise and their debt continues to climb as they are forced to bailout their neighbours.  

Since all European nations are sharing a common currency, technically, they should all be sharing similar interest rates, a situation that was the case until the beginning of the Great Recession as shown here:


Even though bond interest rates have moderated for Spain, Italy and Greece in recent days, there is still a great deal of difference between the debt transgressors and those nations that are perceived to be safe havens.  Now that you've looked at all of these charts, what do you the odds are that Europe will survive in its current incarnation?  My suspicion is that the union of the unequals is doomed.

1 comment:

  1. Not easy to say. If things cannot continue as they are, they will stop, to coin a phrase!

    And then? Not a happy prospect. This is possibly where many people actually finally realize their losses - one of those infrequent discontinuities that wipe out the savings of millions.

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