Markets on Edge: PBOC Response Looms After China’s Bond Market Plunge
All eyes turn to Beijing as traders brace for central bank intervention following the sharpest bond rout in years.
Yield Shockwaves
The selloff sent tremors through global markets—government debt yields spiked to multi-year highs as institutional investors dumped positions. Liquidity evaporated faster than a meme coin's utility token.
Policy Tightrope
The PBOC now walks a razor's edge: inject liquidity to calm markets and risk inflation, or stay hands-off and watch credit markets seize up. Their next move could redefine Asia's financial landscape for years.
Global Domino Effect
Asian currencies wobbled as capital flight fears mounted. Hedge funds scrambled to hedge exposure while crypto markets saw bizarre correlations—because nothing says 'safe haven' like algorithmic stablecoins during a sovereign debt crisis.
Beijing's next play will either restore confidence or trigger the kind of volatility that makes crypto winters look like mild autumn showers. Because when traditional finance trembles, everyone suddenly remembers why Satoshi built the damn thing in the first place.
Slide adds 25 basis points to 10-year yields
The slide since late June had added about 25 basis points to the benchmark 10-year yield before easing late last week. The drop in prices accelerated early last week after a proposal to change mutual fund fees raised concerns that it could discourage bond allocations.
Last year, authorities rolled out bond-market operations as an added lever to fine-tune system liquidity. The PBOC made net purchases for five straight months before pausing in January. The central bank usually releases monthly results at the start of the following month. Expectations for renewed buying are building, the Securities Times reported Friday, citing analyst interviews.
Some economists doubt the central bank is ready to act. The PBOC may hold off because the bond selloff may have further to run, said Lynn Song, chief Greater China economist at ING Bank NV in Hong Kong. He said even a rise in 10-year yields to a 2%–3% range would be “completely reasonable,” compared with the current level of less than 1.9%.
Past episodes show how speculation can miss the mark. According to Bloomberg, in June, purchases of short-dated government bonds by state banks sparked talk that the PBOC was behind the buying, but monthly transaction data later showed that was not the case.
Yields are now at their highest since November as investors rotate into equities on hopes the world’s second-largest economy can MOVE past deflation pressures.
Last week Wednesday, yields on 30-year Chinese government bonds ROSE 0.08 percentage points to 2.21%. The 10-year benchmark added three basis points to 1.82%, its highest level since the run-up to US President Donald Trump’s “liberation day” tariff announcement in April—an episode that spurred investors to pull back from Chinese risk assets.
Bond prices fall when yields rise. As of Monday, the 30-year yield is about 2.19% and the 10-year is around 1.87%.
Bond yields rose despite drop in August consumer prices
Some analysts pointed to details that suggest the campaign against deflation is gaining traction. Factory-gate prices, which have dropped every month since October 2022, contracted by less than expected, while Core consumer inflation and producer price inflation for upstream sectors such as materials increased.
“Anti-involution has started to ease deflationary pressures,” Barclays analysts said, citing Beijing’s drive to reduce wasteful overproduction.
“We expect a firm pick-up of CPI towards year end after some near-term volatility, and upstream reflation to continue for PPI,” Citi analysts said.
China is also part of a broader global selloff in long-dated government bonds that has coincided with a surge in Gold prices, reflecting investor worries about inflation and widening fiscal deficits worldwide. “It’s a sign of growing long-term global inflationary expectations,” said Albert Saporta, group chief executive of GAM Holding. “Thirty-year rates are going up everywhere.”
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