Borrowing costs in the euro area nudged further away from recent lows on Monday, as signs that ECB policymakers are a step closer to winding back hefty monetary stimulus weighed on sentiment.
European Central Bank board member Benoit Coeure said on Monday that given the persistent challenges faced by the ECB in raising consumer prices, its definition of 'medium-term', the time horizon required to meet its inflation target, would be longer than usual.
Those comments briefly pushed bond yields down.
Although the ECB is expected to take baby steps towards exiting its stimulus scheme, news that policymakers have already discussed policy options has tempered sentiment in bond markets.
Reuters reported on Friday that ECB officials generally agreed their next move would be to cut bond purchases, and discussed four options, according to sources.
The news jolted markets a day after the ECB left policy unchanged and suggested October would be decision time regarding the future of the 2.3 trillion euro bond-buying scheme.
The four options being considered, according to Friday's report, include cutting monthly asset purchases from the current 60 billion euros to 20 or 40 billion from the start of 2018, with the scheme running for another six or nine months.
Analysts said that this discussion of numbers in particular has unnerved the bond market.
Germany's 10-year bond yield was 1 basis points higher at 0.33%, up just over 4 bps from 2-1/2 month lows hit at the end of last week. It briefly touched the day's low around 0.32% after Coeure's comments.
Two-year bond German bond yields also pulled back from last week's 4-1/2 month lows to trade a tad higher at minus 0.78 percent.
For southern European bonds markets, especially vulnerable to signs of a scaling back of ECB stimulus, there was some support from a recovery in risk appetite on relief that the weekend passed with no further missile tests from North Korea.
North Korea tensions have been a key market driver in recent weeks, hurting risk sentiment globally.
Bond yields in Portugal, Spain and Italy were flat to a touch lower on Monday , having risen sharply on Friday. (Reuters)
Source: www.businessworld.ie