German Bunds, Inflation And The Euro

 | Jun 10, 2015 10:55AM ET

The dramatic sell-off in German bunds caught many investors off guard. The conventional wisdom, for which we too were sympathetic, was that there was going to be a shortage of bunds.

The Grand Coalition led by Chancellor Merkel is not only committed to a balance budget this year, but it will also retire some debt. These policies limit supply at the same time that the ECB's bond buying program increases demand. In addition, bunds are used not only for investment but collateral.

The German 10-year yield fell around 56 bp at the end of last year to about 5 bp in mid-April. It has since risen sharply. The first leg carried it to about 80 bp into early May. It consolidated for a couple of weeks, and since the start of the month, taken another step up.Today the yield reached almost 1.06%. This is depicted by the yellow line in this Great Graphic created on Bloomberg. From a chart-based perspective, the next target is near 1.25%.