Italy’s 10-Year BTP Yield Rises

2025-11-20 10:07 By Joana Ferreira 1 min. read

Italy’s 10-year BTP yield climbed to 3.46%, following European peers higher and marking its highest level since October 10, as investors favored riskier assets like stocks after strong earnings from AI giant Nvidia.

Attention remains on the delayed US jobs report for guidance on the Federal Reserve’s policy outlook.

The latest Fed meeting minutes also reduced expectations of a December rate cut, while in Europe, the ECB is widely expected to keep rates on hold next year.

The European Commission downgraded Italy’s GDP forecast to 0.4% in 2025, from 0.7% in spring, citing weak net exports and the impact of US tariffs.

Growth is projected to rebound to 0.8% in 2026 and 2027, supported by investments financed through the EU Recovery and Resilience Facility.



News Stream
Italy’s BTP Yields Jump Above 3.9% Amid Middle East Unrest
Italy’s 10-year BTP yield rose above 3.9% as escalating Middle East tensions pressured European bonds. President Donald Trump’s prime-time address, which offered no clear resolution to the conflict, accelerated the sell-off. Although Trump stated that the US operation was nearing completion, his vow of intensified measures, including possible strikes on electrical plants, heightened investor anxiety. The absence of new justifications for the war, combined with persistent uncertainty, has amplified inflation fears and led markets to revise their outlook for the European Central Bank. Investors now price in three interest rate hikes for 2026, up from two expected just yesterday. Prior to the conflict, markets had foreseen no hikes, with some even anticipating monetary easing.
2026-04-02
Italy’s BTP Yields Ease on Iran War Hopes
Italy’s 10-year BTP yield dropped to 3.8%, pulling back from over two-year peaks, as optimism over a potential near-term resolution to the Iran conflict reduced fears of surging energy costs and steep ECB rate increases. US President Donald Trump’s suggestion that the US could exit Iran "in two or three weeks," deal or no deal, fueled the shift in sentiment, though inconsistent messaging from Washington continues to cloud the outlook in the war’s fifth week. Markets have dialed back expectations for ECB tightening, now forecasting only two rate hikes by December, down from three projected earlier this week. Prior to the conflict, investors had expected no hikes in 2026, with a small possibility of policy easing.
2026-04-01
Italy’s Bond Yields Drop, but Inflation Fears Drive Sharp Monthly Climb
Italy’s 10-year BTP yield fell to 3.9%, retreating from over two-year highs, as investors refocused on growth risks tied to the energy shock from the Middle East conflict. Despite the pullback, yields were set to close March up more than 60 basis points, one of the steepest monthly rises among European bonds, amid a broad inflation surge. Soaring energy prices drove the Eurozone’s inflation rate to 2.5%, exceeding the ECB’s 2% target and marking the highest level in over a year. While Italy’s EU-harmonized inflation held steady at 1.5%, the broader trend led markets to abandon rate cut expectations, now pricing in at least two ECB hikes by 2026. ECB’s François Villeroy de Galhau reaffirmed the bank’s commitment to controlling inflation but noted that discussions on rate timing remained premature.
2026-03-31