Chinese government bonds see record sell-off amid tightening, looming Fed rate rise
Mainland’s 10-year treasury futures plunged by 1.05 per cent on Monday, the biggest one-day drop since the contract started trading
China’s government bond market saw a record sell-off on Monday, extending losses since the start of October.
Bonds are under intense pressure as Beijing continues to tighten regulations in a bid to deleverage the market, and as a near-certain interest rate increase by the US Federal Reserve looms this week.
China’s 10-year treasury futures for March delivery, the most actively traded contract, plunged by 1.05 per cent on the China Financial Futures Exchange, the biggest one-day drop since the contract started trading. The price has declined 2.16 per cent so far in December, following a 1.73 per cent slump in November.
Five-year treasury futures for March delivery were also down by nearly 0.5 per cent on Monday.
The slump comes as China’s government bond yield keeps rising. The yield on the benchmark 10-year government bond with a coupon rate of 2.74 per cent climbed to 3.15 per cent on Monday. A bond price moves inversely to its yield.