After Years Of Stability, Interest Rate Volatility Is Back. Here's Why

 | Jun 07, 2018 01:10AM ET

  • European political uncertainty spiked volatility in sovereign bond markets and the euro
  • Hawkish emerging market monetary policy attempts to alleviate local FX havoc and inflationary concerns
  • Chances of Fed rescue are slim
  • Following several years of low interest rates and depressed yields on sovereign debt, the double whammy of increased political uncertainty alongside tightening monetary policy have raised the heat in financial markets. And it's a close race to see which will drive greater volatility.

    h3 Italian, Spanish Politics Push Bond Yields Higher, Euro Lower/h3

    Italy recently grabbed the spotlight on the political uncertainty front. Concerns over the formation of its anti-establishment, euroskeptic government sent bond yields soaring to a four-year high. The selloff in Italian 10-year bonds—bond prices move inversely to yields—saw the yield on its government debt jump more than a full percentage point to as high 3.388%. With anti EU parties Five-Star Movement and the League forming a coalition government, investors worried that the possibility of a eurozone breakup was back on the table.