Russian 10-Year Yield Declines from 4-Month High
2025-10-20 16:58
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
The yield on the 10-year Russian OFZ fell to 14.6% from the four-month high of 15.2% tested earlier in October, tracking some support for Russian assets on favorable geopolitical developments.
US President Trump noted that Ukrainian President Zelensky should accept more favorable terms to end the war with Russia, while EU leaders faced barriers to using frozen Russian assets to support Ukraine.
The developments added some respite to OFZ's after higher bond supply and higher interest rates triggered a plunge in Russian debt since August.
The draft of next year's budget reflected RUB 13 trillion, or 40% of the federal budget, allocated for defense spending amid Russia's war with Ukraine, more than noted in preliminary documents, to extend the period of ample spending by the Russian federal government.
The flat spending coincided with risks to government revenues amid Russia's slowing economy, low Russian commodity prices amid a strong ruble, and high interest rates by the central bank.