Canada 10-Year Bond Yield Eases from 1-Month High
2025-11-12 13:57
By
Felipe Alarcon
1 min. read
The yield on the Canadian 10-year government bond eased toward 3.16%, retreating from a one-month high seen November 7th, amid a clearer Bank of Canada policy path, a softer US growth signal and firmer odds of Fed easing.
The BoC’s October cut to 2.25% and its October Monetary Policy Report made clear that the economy is struggling with tariff driven trade disruption and that inflation is close to target, a mix that the Governing Council framed as narrowing the case for further easing and moving policy toward a more stable stance.
At the same time Ottawa’s large borrowing program for 2025 26 and a projected federal deficit around $78 billion raised the prospect of heavier sovereign issuance and a larger supply premium on long-dated paper.
Meanwhile, US indicators pointed to weaker activity which pushed markets to raise the probability of a December Fed cut, reducing the yield compensation investors require for holding long government bonds.