European Government Bond Yields Stay Low As Lockdowns, Brexit Fuel Uncertainty

 | Dec 08, 2020 21:09

The European Central Bank moves to center stage this week, after hinting that it will top up its pandemic emergency purchase program from the current €1.35 trillion. The resurgence of COVID-19 in Europe and the dip into negative inflation rates in the eurozone will keep ECB policymakers from being stingy in the amount they add.

Estimates of the increase are about €500 billion and anything less than that might disappoint investors. The PEPP started with €750 billion in March and a further €600 billion was added in June. Some analysts are forecasting a total expansion of another €1 trillion, though probably not all at once. At this week’s meeting, the expectation is that the program will be extended through next year and perhaps into 2022 from its current expiration in mid-2021.

ECB buying has pushed Italian bond yields to record lows. The benchmark 10-year bond settled at about 0.57% Monday.