2 September 2025

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Australian 3-year bond (%)3.4243.3940.03
Australian 10-year bond (%)4.3644.3250.039
Australian 30-year bond (%)5.1265.0820.044
United States 2-year bond (%)3.6473.6230.024
United States 10-year bond (%)4.2694.2260.043
United States 30-year bond (%)4.96344.9180.0454

Overview of the Australian Bond Market

Australian government bonds weakened on September 2, 2025, with yields rising as better-than-expected current account data tempered easing bets, amid gold’s record rally and global haven flows post-US holiday. The 10-year yield climbed 4 basis points to 4.36%, the 2-year added 2 bps to 3.37%, the 5-year gained 3 bps to 3.70%, and the 15-year rose 4 bps to 4.73%. In August, yields increased modestly—10-year up ~9 bps overall—reflecting RBA patience after July CPI surprise, though global dovish shifts capped rises.

Q2 current account -13.7B (surpassing -16B forecast) and +0.1% net exports bolster growth views pre-GDP, blending with bond selling as Trump’s inflation claims and Fed interference—firing attempts on Cook—risk politicized policy, inflating long-term costs and eroding US asset trust, spilling to Aussie yields via haven demand as gold hits $US3,578. Tariff truce talks (90-day extension possible) and EU deals ease trade wars, but Ukraine escalation and weakening US ISM (48.7 vs 49) underscore divergence, supporting higher-for-longer locally.

Upcoming S&P Global Services PMI (55.8 expected) and GDP (1.6% YY poll) could sway RBA, with swaps at ~60% Fed September cut amid data resilience. Positioning cautious per CFTC, eyeing diversified plays as US deficits worsen.

Australia 10-Year Government Bond Yield

 

Overview of the US Bond Market

U.S. Treasuries weakened at the start of September, with the 30-year yield climbing toward 5% in tandem with a selloff in long-dated European bonds. The move comes during a historically challenging month for duration risk, as long-term government bonds have averaged 2% losses each September over the past decade. On Tuesday, benchmark yields settled about 4 basis points higher at the long end, retracing session highs after weaker-than-expected ISM manufacturing data showed soft activity, employment, and prices paid, though new orders improved.

Selling pressure was also fueled by a surge in corporate debt issuance, with 27 investment-grade deals launched in the post-Labor Day rush. Analysts suggested as much as $160 billion in supply could come this month, compounding the seasonal weakness. Kathy Jones of Charles Schwab noted that markets are demanding a higher term premium until clearer economic signals or policy coherence emerges, with Friday’s jobs report seen as pivotal.

Global dynamics added pressure: U.K. 30-year yields reached levels last seen in 1998, while French yields rose to 4.51%. Pimco’s Michael Cudzil and Natixis’s John Briggs highlighted that yields around 5% may not hold but underscore persistent concerns about long-end vulnerability.

Markets are increasingly pricing Federal Reserve easing, with fed funds futures assigning a 92% chance of a quarter-point cut in September and 55 basis points by year-end. While Governor Christopher Waller backed a 25-basis-point reduction, he left the door open to larger cuts if labor data deteriorates. Economists expect Friday’s report to show 75,000 new jobs and unemployment rising to 4.3%. Weak outcomes could push traders to consider a half-point cut, amplifying volatility in long bonds already pressured by global fiscal strains and heavy issuance.

 

US 2 Year Treasury Bond Note Yield