Global sovereign yields moved higher over the past week, led by the US and core Europe, as inflation concerns—particularly energy-driven—continued to dominate. In the US, yields rose across the curve, with the 2Y and 5Y up 10bp to 3.88% and 4.01%, respectively, while the 10Y increased 7bp to 4.37%. Notably, the US 10Y Breakeven rose 7bp to 2.50%, while real yields were unchanged, pointing to inflation expectations as the main driver.
European rates followed suit, albeit with smaller moves. German 2Y yields climbed 10bp to 2.64%, while 10Y Bunds rose 4bp to 3.04%. Peripheral spreads widened modestly, with Italian 10Y yields up 8bp to 3.86%, underperforming core markets. UK 10Y Gilts increased 5bp to 4.96%, while Japan saw a notable rise, with 10Y JGB yields up 8bp to 2.52%. Switzerland stood out, with 10Y yields declining 4bp, diverging from the broader trend.
Bond performance was negative across most developed markets, particularly in the US where duration weighed heavily. The iShares Treasury 20+ Year ETF fell -1.27%, underperforming shorter maturities. Euro area bonds were more resilient, with the iShares EUR Inflation Linked Govt Bond ETF gaining 0.47%, reflecting the inflation-driven sell-off in nominal bonds.
Emerging market
Emerging market (EM) sovereign USD bonds declined, pressured by surging oil prices and wider US Treasury yields. However, Angola and Nigeria, being oil producers, were notable outperformers, benefiting from increased demand from Europe.
EM corporates remain the most resilient segment, total return falling less than EM sovereign hard-currency and local currency. EM corporate spreads have held up well, supported by surging earnings expectations.
The UAE’s decision to leave OPEC effective 1 May highlights its long-standing frustration with production caps. The UAE was OPEC’s third largest producer, behind Saudi Arabia and Iraq, and accounted for roughly 3% of global oil output. Abu Dhabi has a comparatively lower fiscal breakeven oil price and meaningful spare capacity than most other OPEC members but is currently constrained by the Strait of Hormuz disruption. Abu Dhabi has increasingly resisted Saudi dominance within the Gulf.
EM debt continued to see inflows for a third consecutive week.
Brazil’s central bank cut the policy rate by 25 basis points to 14.5% last week, as highly anticipated. The communication keeps the door open for more rate cuts, supportive to Brazilian corporates.
Commodity exporters such as Brazil, Colombia, Chile and Peru have benefited from higher commodity prices, providing some fiscal breathing room. Meanwhile, even net oil importers have partly offset the energy-cost drag through resilient agricultural and metals prices.
Romania’s political risk has risen after Prime Minister Ilie Bolojan lost a no-confidence vote on Tuesday. The market reaction has been muted. Romania is nonetheless an EU member state operating under Brussels fiscal surveillance. Bolojan's government was actually running ahead of its fiscal targets, delivering a deficit of 7.9% of GDP in 2025 against an 8.4% commitment. Beyond near-term volatility, the risk for bondholders appears narrower than the political headlines currently suggest.