German Bund Yields Post Biggest Monthly Jump Since 2022

2026-03-31 08:30 By Joana Ferreira 1 min. read

Germany’s 10-year Bund yield was poised to end March at 3%, close to its highest level since May 2011, after surging 36 basis points, marking the largest monthly rise since late 2022.

Investors intensified their focus on the economic impact of the prolonged Middle East conflict, now in its fifth week, which has sustained elevated oil prices.

Adding to the uncertainty, reports suggested that US President Donald Trump was willing to halt the US military campaign against Iran, even if the Strait of Hormuz remained blocked.

The surge in energy prices pushed Europe’s inflation higher, with Germany’s EU-harmonized inflation rate climbing to 2.8% in March.

Markets, in response, abandoned expectations of an ECB rate cut, now anticipating at least two interest rate hikes in 2026.

While ECB’s François Villeroy de Galhau reaffirmed the bank’s commitment to combating energy-driven inflation, he cautioned that discussions on the timing of rate adjustments were still premature.



News Stream
Bund Yields Dip on Oil Decline
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German 10-year Bund yields climbed above 3%, moving further from last week’s two-month low of 2.93%, as renewed US-Iran tensions amplified inflation concerns and reinforced expectations of European Central Bank rate hikes this year. Iran’s Tasnim News Agency reported on Monday that Tehran would halt negotiations with the US over Israeli strikes on Lebanon and fully close the Strait of Hormuz, accusing Washington of "violating the ceasefire on all fronts." The resulting oil price surge led investors to increase bets on ECB rate increases. Markets now anticipate at least two ECB rate hikes in 2026, with an over 90% chance of the first occurring as soon as next week. Investors are also focused on this week’s Eurozone inflation report, following last week’s data showing accelerated EU-harmonized inflation in May for France, Italy, and Spain, while Germany experienced a slowdown.
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