30.9.2026
Here’s an interpretation of the bond market data in the chart:
Overview
This chart shows yields (annualized returns) for various government bonds, along with the daily change in yield.
Bond yields move inversely to bond prices.
Key Observations
1. U.S. Treasury Yields (short to long-term)
3-Month: 3.705% ▲ (+0.005)
The only U.S. yield that rose today, but the move is tiny.2-Year: 3.883% ▼ (−0.033)
5-Year: 4.037% ▼ (−0.035)
10-Year (benchmark): 4.406% ▼ (−0.034)
30-Year: 4.954% ▼ (−0.028)
➡️ Most U.S. yields fell, with the 5-year seeing the largest drop.
This suggests bond prices rose, possibly due to safe-haven demand or expectations of slower economic growth or Fed rate cuts.
2. Yield Curve Shape (U.S.)
3-month: 3.705%
10-year: 4.406%
The curve is not inverted (longer yields > shorter yields), which is normal.
However, the 30-year yield (4.954%) is notably higher than the 10-year, reflecting term premium for very long-dated debt.
3. International Bonds
Germany (Bund 10-Yr): 3.109% ▲ (+0.011)
Yield rose slightly, diverging from the U.S. move.Japan (JPN 10-Yr): 2.366% ▼ (−0.005)
Little change; still low by global standards.UK (UK 10-Yr): 4.992% ▲ (+0.02)
Yield rose, now near 5.00% — significantly higher than U.S. or German 10-year yields.
This may reflect UK-specific inflation or fiscal concerns.
Summary
U.S. yields fell across most maturities, indicating stronger bond demand (prices up) — possibly due to expectations of weaker economic data or Fed rate cuts.
Global divergence: U.K. yields rose sharply, while German yields rose slightly, and Japanese yields dipped.
The 10-year U.S. yield at 4.406% remains the benchmark for global borrowing costs.
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