China 10-Year Yield Rises Ahead of Holiday
2026-02-13 05:55
By
Czyrill Jean Coloma
1 min. read
China’s 10-year government bond yield rose toward 1.80% on Friday, rebounding from a three-month low as investors took a cautious approach ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday.
Mainland China markets will be closed Feb. 16–23, 2026, for the country’s biggest festival.
Earlier this week, several developments shaped market sentiment.
Financial institutions were advised to limit US Treasury holdings and reduce high-exposure positions amid concentration risk and market volatility.
Meanwhile, the central bank reaffirmed its “moderately loose” monetary policy, signaling caution amid evolving domestic and global conditions.
In the bond market, China raised CNY 14 billion in its first sovereign bond auction in Hong Kong this year, with yields hitting its lowest levels in over a decade.
On the geopolitical front, the US has reportedly paused several tech-security measures targeting China ahead of a planned April summit between Presidents Donald Trump and Xi Jinping, easing some market pressure.