Bond Vigilantes Are Putting Governments on Notice

On a rather quiet final Friday of the year, I used my Bloomberg Terminal to check how key government bond yields in advanced economies have changed in 2024. After all, these are widely regarded as the most accurate gauge of the economic outlook, including growth, inflation and central bank policies. It is, therefore, interesting to see the many ways in which bond yields defied the majority of forecasts in 2024 and consider what that means for the year ahead.

The first thing that struck me is the extent to which 10-year bond yields have increased in a year that saw central banks in advanced economies begin cutting interest rates and during which record amounts flowed into fixed-income investments.

As part of the general move up, the US 10-year Treasury yield, a global benchmark, rose by 0.75 percentage point during the year to 4.63% last week, near its 2024 high of 4.70%. Only the UK came near the US, with its 4.63% yield having climbed by a more dramatic 1.10 percentage points despite considerably weaker growth dynamics and less intense inflationary pressures.

Within the euro zone, we witnessed a once unthinkable convergence between the region’s core and its periphery. Germany, the regional benchmark, saw its yield rise by 0.37 percentage point. France had a 0.65 percentage point gain, more than triple Greece’s 0.19 percentage point. Meanwhile, in Asia, the near doubling of Japan’s yield to 1.11% happened in the sort of orderly manner that few would have expected.