HomeNewsOpinionAn (almost) inverted yield curve is worrying China

An (almost) inverted yield curve is worrying China

An inverted yield curve has a bad rap. In normal times, notes with longer maturities offer higher rates to compensate lenders for tying up their money for an extended period. When those yields sink close to or below shorter ones, it’s an indication that investors are pessimistic about an economy’s growth prospects

March 11, 2024 / 11:31 IST
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china economy
An asset famine is driving risk-taking among China’s investors. (Source: Bloomberg)

A curious thing is happening in China’s 29 trillion yuan ($4 trillion) government bond market.

The yield differential between 30- and 10-year bonds has narrowed to as little as 11 basis points, sparking discussions over whether some parts of the sovereign curve will invert too, like it did in the US.

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The yield curve may be getting flatter because of temporary market dynamics, not fundamentals. Much of the compression came from a strong rally in ultra-long notes. The 30-year is offering only 2.4 percent, an almost 1 percentage point drop from a year earlier. It’s even lower than the 2.5 percent one-year loan rate at which the People’s Bank of China lends to big financial institutions.

Spooked by a January stock market rout, households pulled money out of equities and poured their savings into bond funds, whose solid returns turned out to be a bright spot. Meanwhile, a slowdown in new offerings
from higher-yielding local government financing vehicles is pushing asset managers to purchase more ultra-long sovereign notes in order to juice up their portfolio returns.