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Government Bond Yields Are Sinking Around The World

Mike Bird   

Government Bond Yields Are Sinking Around The World

Government bond yields are sinking across the advanced economies this morning. It looks a lot like investors are moving towards the safety of government debt as stocks sink around the world.

Investors typically move into government bonds, which don't make them a lot of money, when there's a lot of risk elsewhere. Treasuries are regarded as very safe investments, but the more demand there is for them, the lower yields go and the less of a return a buyer gets.

In Europe, French, Dutch, Austrian, Belgian and Finnish 10-year yields hit record lows, according to Twitter's Fabrizio Goria. Germany's 10-year yield is sitting at just 0.51%, and Japan's just dropped below 0.30% for the first time ever.

10-year US treasury yields are back below 2% again for the first time since October, when they fell for a very brief period. Yields haven't been below 2% for any sustained period since the first half of 2013. Here's some context: 

Us treasuriesInvesting.com, Business Insider

Jamie McGeever at Reuters has a great graph from Citi, showing the effect of all this. 10-year government bonds issued in G3 currencies (the US dollar, the euro and yen) are now yielding below 1% for the first time ever.

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