Just beneath the surface of calm global indices, the bond market continues to pulse with restless energy—and nowhere is the unease more layered than in France, Japan and the U.S., where fiscal politics are beginning to leave visible marks on the yield curve.
Start with France, where passing the new budget is shaping up to be less a policy exercise and more a knife-edge political gamble. The proposed cuts—such as scrapping public holidays to tame the deficit—may win nods from Brussels, but they risk revolt in parliament. With the government juggling a worrisome 6% deficit-to-GDP ratio and no clear majority, markets are rightly uneasy. The OAT-Bund spread may still hover around 70bps, but that’s the eye of the storm, not its tail. If talks sour or stall, expect that spread to pop wider—especially with European defense spending poised to rise and the ECB’s balance sheet now shrinking instead of cushioning.
About ninety minutes after Tuesday’s CPI print crossed the wires, U.S. Treasuries turned tail and sold off. Not because the inflation number was hot—it wasn’t. It met expectations, even gave the bulls a window to test the downside in yields. But the market didn’t bite. Instead, it reversed, hard. That pivot wasn’t random—it spoke volumes.
Either a whale-sized seller stepped in to short-circuit the post-CPI optimism, or we’ve hit an inflection point where the price action is no longer about just the data. It’s about the soundtrack playing in the background: a dissonant mix of rising issuance, political tension around Powell’s role, and the looming specter of tariff-fueled inflation. It’s a market that’s stopped hoping for a clean Fed pivot and started bracing for a muddier, messier path forward.
This isn't just a U.S. story or a French dilemma—Japan’s fiscal trajectory looks shaky, and the UK isn’t far behind. What we're witnessing is a slow boil across multiple G7 economies, where structural deficits and rising populist pressures are making fiscal repair politically toxic. That, in turn, is setting the stage for more volatility in sovereign debt—especially in Europe, where tighter spreads have been defying gravity for months.
But gravity has a way of reasserting itself. With the ECB no longer acting as a backstop, and EU capitals eyeing bigger defense budgets, the tightrope act in EGBs looks increasingly wobbly. The tightening in BTP-Bund spreads may be yesterday’s story—what lies ahead is a re-widening phase, led by growing doubts over who will foot the bill when the music stops.
In this environment, bond markets are no longer the tranquil, sleepy backwaters of the global system. They are becoming the new fear index—reactive, sensitive, and increasingly political. Don’t be fooled by the low-vol surface—beneath it, the tectonic plates are shifting.
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