Investors
Seeking Safety Look to German Government Bonds as US Bond Fall
The country’s debt is in demand amid the
chaos in financial markets spurred by whipsawing U.S. tariff policies.
·
Investors seeking other places for safety,
such as gold, the Swiss franc and German bunds.
·
The 10-year U.S. yield was around 4.5 percent,
climbing nearly half a percentage point in one week, a huge move in that market.
·
Germany’s strict limits on government borrowing
have given the country a stellar AAA credit rating.
[ABS
News Service/12.04.2025]
Germany has long taken flack from Wall Street and financial capitals around Europe
for the extreme fiscal conservatism that has kept the country’s debt levels low.
But as global markets convulsed this week, investors rewarded Germany’s caution
by snapping up its government bonds, which are known as bunds.
Investors have reeled
after President Trump imposed 10 percent tariffs on nearly every trading partner,
temporarily rescinded even higher “reciprocal” tariffs hours after they came into
effect and steadily ratcheted up tariffs on China to well above 100 percent.
The resulting tumult hit U.S. assets hard,
including Treasuries
and the dollar, normally considered haven assets.
That sent investors seeking other places for safety, such as gold, the Swiss franc
and German bunds.
The 10-year yield on German bunds, which
moves inversely to prices, fell to 2.56 percent, near its lowest level in more than
a month. That is notable relative to the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield, arguably the most important
interest rate in the world, which has soared higher. On Friday, the
10-year U.S. yield was around 4.5 percent, climbing nearly half a percentage point
in one week, a huge move in that market.
Germany’s strict limits on government borrowing
have given the country a stellar AAA credit rating. But last month, lawmakers decided
that the next government could abandon the borrowing
limit and take on trillions of euros in fresh debt to bolster the country’s
military and crumbling public infrastructure. Germany’s export-driven economy is
also heavily exposed to tariffs, given the large amount of trade its automakers
and other industrial companies do with the United States.
The prospect of extra borrowing and a slowing
economy had begun to put pressure on German bunds. But the turmoil elsewhere in
recent weeks prompted investors to turn back to the country’s debt as a source of
safety.
This week, Germany’s expected next chancellor,
Friedrich Merz, also announced the blueprint
for his government, which included an economic plan to jump-start
the ailing German economy. And ahead of its planned borrowing binge, Germany benefits
from low debt relative to the size of its economy, at about 60 percent of gross
domestic product. By comparison, U.S. debt is about 120 percent of the size of its
economy.
It was “very striking” that in a moment
of stress German bunds were acting as the “haven of choice” instead of U.S. Treasuries,
said Sander Tordoir, chief economist at the Centre for
European Reform, a research institute.
“There does seem to be a real safety premium
now being place on German government debt,” he said.