European Bond Yields Rise As Brexit Talks Lead To Cautious Deal Optimism

 | Dec 15, 2020 03:33AM ET

After months of brinksmanship and the posturing that goes with it, Britain and the European Union seem to be getting serious about concluding a last-minute post-Brexit trade deal. Negotiators have postponed their mostly unilateral deadlines repeatedly. Indeed, the Dec. 31 end of the Brexit transition period was probably the only deadline that ever counted.

European government bond yields came off last week’s lows Monday as weekend talks of a renewed effort to “go the extra mile” buoyed hopes that a deal could be reached after all.

h2 Efforts To 'Go The Extra Mile,' But Markets Wary Of Negative Risks/h2

Michel Barnier, the EU’s chief negotiator, was suggesting that a deal could be done even this week, or it if came too late for European Parliament ratification this year, the parties could agree to a provisional deal pending a vote in early 2021.

UK gilt yields were up 2 to 5 basis points on Monday, and bond yields of top EU member countries showed a similar rise as optimism about an accord encouraged investors to move tentatively out of the safe haven of bonds. (Bond yields move inversely to prices.)

Yields on the benchmark 10-year gilts rose more than 5 bps at one point, to 0.24%. One analyst forecast the yield could shoot up to 0.45% and beyond if an agreement is reached.

Germany’s 10-year bund, less sensitive to Brexit politics, edged up more than 1.5 bps to about minus 0.62%.