ch
CH
Switzerland
en-CH
ch_inst_classes
inst
Institutional
en
en
For use by professional clients and/or equivalent investor types in your jurisdiction (not to be used with or passed on to retail clients).
City scene with people walking

Insights

In Credit Weekly Snapshot – Tired of waiting for you

Our fixed income team provide their update of recent market events

The European Central Bank is contending with increased fiscal spending and a massive shift in the Dutch pension system, leaving markets seeking clarity. Read on for a breakdown of fixed income news across sectors and regions.

Macro/government bonds

Last week, US 10-year yields fell 5bps to 4.01%, German 10-year yields fell 2bps to 2.69%, and UK 10-year yields fell 11bps to 4.44%. The trigger for the move lower in the US was, as discussed below, increased market expectations of a December rate cut, while in the UK the decline reflected a positive reaction to the UK budget after pre-budget scares, coupled with news of planned reduced long-end issuance.

Economic data from the US was weak this week. The Federal Reserve’s Beige Book and consumer confidence data pointed to declining consumer spending, margin compression and a softening labour market. Market pricing of a quarter point rate cut in December rose from a probability of 75% to 88% during the week.

Meanwhile, the UK government delivered a budget that combined welfare spending increases with back-loaded tax rises. The expected broadening of the higher rate tax base over the next five-year period meant that the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, could increase her fiscal headroom to £22 billion by 2029-30. This was greeted positively by gilt market participants who had been expecting a smaller estimate of headroom.

Eurozone bond yields were barely changed as European Central Banks officials argued that eurozone interest rates were appropriate.

The Reserve Bank of New Zealand cut its cash rate from 2.50% to 2.25% to combat growing spare capacity in the economy. Conversely, the governor of the Bank of Japan, Kazuo Ueda, hinted that the central bank could move as soon as December to tighten monetary policy.

Positioning The global rates desk took profits on a long-duration position in gilts. However, we still retain a yield curve steepening position in the gilt market, as well as steepening positions in euro and US bond markets.

Interested in learning more?

Download the latest edition of ‘In Credit’ for the usual top-to-bottom lowdown including Markets a glance, Chart of the week, and credit sector breakdowns including investment grade, high yield and emerging markets.

Key topics

Subscribe to insights

Get the most out of your email by tailoring the types of insights and information you would like to receive from us.

Latest articles

It is our final update of the year but there is plenty going on this week in financial markets.
A new generation of state-contingent debt instruments is reshaping the emerging markets (EM) landscape, creating value for investors and providing creative solutions for sovereigns.
Discussing the case for emerging market equities – including a weaker US dollar – and the potential benefits of adopting an active approach.
Key topics
Related topics

Important Information

The research and analysis included on this website has been produced by Columbia Threadneedle Investments for its own investment management activities, may have been acted upon prior to publication and is made available here incidentally. Any opinions expressed are made as at the date of publication but are subject to change without notice and should not be seen as investment advice. Information obtained from external sources is believed to be reliable but its accuracy or completeness cannot be guaranteed.

Related Insights

11 December 2025

Gordon Bowers

CFA, Sovereign Research Analyst, Emerging Markets Debt

Kate Moreton

Sovereign Research Analyst, Emerging Markets Debt

Eng Tat Low

Sovereign Research Analyst, Emerging Markets Debt

Unlocking innovation in emerging markets debt

A new generation of state-contingent debt instruments is reshaping the emerging markets (EM) landscape, creating value for investors and providing creative solutions for sovereigns.
9 December 2025

In Credit Weekly Snapshot – Big in Japan

Bond yields ratcheted higher globally last week, with a key trigger being shifting interest rate expectations in Japan. Will there be moves to repatriate overseas bond holdings to take advantage of these higher domestic rates? Read on for a breakdown of fixed income news across sectors and regions.
3 December 2025

Luke Copley

Client Portfolio Manager, Fixed Income

Jason Callan

Co-Head of Structured Assets, Senior Portfolio Manager

Ryan Osborn

Co-Head of Structured Assets, Senior Portfolio Manager

LDI focus: Diversification benefits of US securitised credit

US securitised assets offer diversification benefits in a marketplace that offers attractive yields for its high-quality nature. When blended into LDI portfolios there is opportunity to enhance collateral waterfall resilience while improving risk/return dynamics.
15 December 2025

Anthony Willis

Senior Economist, Multi-Asset Solutions team

Weekly Perspectives: Looking forward to 2026

It is our final update of the year but there is plenty going on this week in financial markets.
11 December 2025

Gordon Bowers

CFA, Sovereign Research Analyst, Emerging Markets Debt

Kate Moreton

Sovereign Research Analyst, Emerging Markets Debt

Eng Tat Low

Sovereign Research Analyst, Emerging Markets Debt

Unlocking innovation in emerging markets debt

A new generation of state-contingent debt instruments is reshaping the emerging markets (EM) landscape, creating value for investors and providing creative solutions for sovereigns.
10 December 2025

Krishan Selva

Client Portfolio Manager

Moira Gorman

Client Relationship and Sales Director

Big, broad, innovative – the case for emerging market equities

Discussing the case for emerging market equities – including a weaker US dollar – and the potential benefits of adopting an active approach.

Important Information

The research and analysis included on this website has been produced by Columbia Threadneedle Investments for its own investment management activities, may have been acted upon prior to publication and is made available here incidentally. Any opinions expressed are made as at the date of publication but are subject to change without notice and should not be seen as investment advice. Information obtained from external sources is believed to be reliable but its accuracy or completeness cannot be guaranteed.

Thank you. You can now visit your preference centre to choose which insights you would like to receive by email.

To view and control which insights you receive from us by email, please visit your preference centre.

Woman listens to music through headphones
Play Video

CT Property Trust- Fund Manager Update

Sed ut perspiciatis unde omnis iste natus error sit voluptatem accusantium doloremque laudantium