German Bund Yields Surge to 2011 Levels on Inflation Worries

2026-05-18 07:43 By Joana Ferreira 1 min. read

Germany’s 10-year Bund yield approached 3.2%, its highest level since May 2011, as a Friday selloff deepened amid growing inflation concerns tied to the unresolved Middle East conflict.

Brent crude prices are nearing four-year highs, with the US and Iran still far from agreeing on reopening the Strait of Hormuz.

President Trump has voiced renewed frustration with Tehran, and the prolonged closure of the strait raises the risk of sustained oil price increases, which could drive broader inflation in the global economy.

Investors have responded by increasing bets on European Central Bank rate hikes, now fully pricing in three increases.



News Stream
Bund Yields Steady Near Multi-Year Highs
Germany’s 10-year bund yield almost touched 3.2%, a new 15-year high as investors anticipate sustained high energy prices would drive broader inflation and prompt further central bank rate hikes.Brent crude remained near a four-year high after US President Donald Trump delayed additional strikes on Iran but directed the military to ready a "full, large-scale assault" if talks collapse. Expectations for European Central Bank tightening have eased slightly, though markets still assign an 80% probability to a 25-basis-point rate increase next month, with two more likely by year-end. Recent data highlighted the economic strain: Eurozone growth slowed to 0.1% in Q1 2026, the weakest since Q2 2025, due to Middle East-related energy constraints, while inflation climbed to 3% in April, the highest since September 2023 and well above the ECB’s 2% target. Investors now await Thursday’s flash S&P Global PMI surveys for further policy signals.
2026-05-19
German Bund Yields Retreat as Oil Prices Fall
Germany’s 10-year Bund yield pulled back to 3.14% after hitting 3.19% on Monday, its highest level since May 2011, as oil prices fell, easing inflation concerns. The decline followed reports that the US proposed a temporary waiver on Iran oil sanctions, with Tehran willing to accept a long-term nuclear freeze but not a full dismantlement of its atomic program. The retreat comes after a sharp selloff in European bonds last week, as investors reassessed risks from inflation, elevated energy prices, political uncertainty, and rising fiscal pressures. Markets are increasingly adapting to a "higher-for-longer" interest rate environment, with investors now fully pricing in three European Central Bank rate hikes this year and assigning a 90% probability to the first increase in June. Attention now turns to Thursday’s flash S&P Global PMI surveys for further monetary policy clues.
2026-05-18
German Bund Yields Surge to 2011 Levels on Inflation Worries
Germany’s 10-year Bund yield approached 3.2%, its highest level since May 2011, as a Friday selloff deepened amid growing inflation concerns tied to the unresolved Middle East conflict. Brent crude prices are nearing four-year highs, with the US and Iran still far from agreeing on reopening the Strait of Hormuz. President Trump has voiced renewed frustration with Tehran, and the prolonged closure of the strait raises the risk of sustained oil price increases, which could drive broader inflation in the global economy. Investors have responded by increasing bets on European Central Bank rate hikes, now fully pricing in three increases.
2026-05-18