30 June 2025

ClosePrevious CloseChange
Australian 3-year bond (%)3.2713.2580.013
Australian 10-year bond (%)4.1664.1460.02
Australian 30-year bond (%)4.8584.8280.03
United States 2-year bond (%)3.7253.75-0.025
United States 10-year bond (%)4.2514.271-0.02
United States 30-year bond (%)4.80814.824-0.0159

Overview of the Australian Bond Market

The Australian bond market experienced modest movements on June 30, 2025. The 10-year yield rose to 4.18%, up by 0.04 percentage points from the previous session. The Bloomberg AusBond Composite 0+ Yr Index rose by 0.16%, indicating a slight uptick in bond prices.
Short-term yields declined, with three-month bank bills falling by 15 basis points to 3.73%, and six-month bank bills dropping 11 basis points to 3.77%. Government bond yields showed mixed movements; the three-year bonds rose slightly by 1 basis point to 3.33%, while ten-year bonds increased by 9 basis points to 4.26%.
The Reserve Bank of Australia’s cautious tone surprised markets, despite the expected rate cut. Inflation appears to be stabilizing, and the labor market remains resilient, with unemployment steady at 4.1%. As of late June 2025, market expectations for the RBA cash rate are clearly tilted toward further easing, driven by soft economic data and moderating inflation.

Australian 3Y & 10Y Bond Yields_30.06.25

Overview of the US Bond Market

U.S. Treasury yields exhibited mixed movements on June 30, 2025. The 10-year Treasury yield eased to 4.28%, reflecting investor caution ahead of a central bank summit in Portugal, where Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell is expected to speak. Conversely, the 2-year Treasury yield rose slightly to 3.76%, indicating short-term rate expectations. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index declined by 0.4%, reaching a three-year low, amid speculation that President Donald Trump may announce a replacement for Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell by October.

US-2Y-10Y-Bond-Yields_30.06.25