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China’s sovereign yield curve is steepening, a move that’s likely to be welcomed by authorities, as the threat of intervention prompts traders to slow purchases of longer term bonds.
China’s yield curve has become the steepest in two years as a combination of flush liquidity and speculation the central bank will keep policy accommodative pushes down rates on shorter-maturity ...
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China's central bank is determined to maintain a normal upward-sloping yield curve and correct bond-market risks, the bank-backed Financial News reported late on Friday ...
China's yield curve is expected to return to a more normal shape next year, making short-dated bonds better bets as funding conditions have just started to ease and monetary policy stays ...
China's surprise rate cut signals panic, adds to risk aversion in the market. The steepening of the U.S. Treasury yield curve is the biggest risk, one observer said.
The bond market had a split reaction on Monday to President Donald Trump’s weekend announcement of tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China, with short-term yields rising and longer-term rates ...
China's yield curve flattened on Monday amid a surge in buying interest in ultra-long 30-year government bonds, as investors sought safer long run bets following losses in the country's A shares ...
As the yield curve inversion points towards a further economic slowdown in the coming years, some analysts expect Beijing to relax credit controls in an effort to reverse the trend.
China’s Clumsy Yield-Curve Control Can Easily Misfire Beijing’s attempts to halt the bond rally can lead to mass redemptions and a spike in yields.
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 ...