A surge in European retail investment into Fixed Maturity Products (FMPs) creates a stable, long-term demand base for short-dated corporate bonds. This "locked-up" capital anchors the short end of the curve, providing stability during volatile periods and potentially distorting risk pricing.

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Emerging market central banks' hawkish commentary while cutting rates reinforces market stability. This low volatility, in turn, gives them confidence to continue the cutting cycle. This feedback loop can make low-volatility periods surprisingly persistent, as the actions and outcomes mutually reinforce each other.

With the European Central Bank firmly on hold, a low-volatility regime is expected to persist. However, the options market is not fully pricing in the potential for directional curve movements, such as steepening or flattening. This creates opportunities to express curve views through options where the risk is undervalued.

Despite a sizable fiscal boost, Germany is not expected to experience rising term premium. The country's debt-to-GDP ratio remains low, and strong demand from the private sector and foreign investors is forecast to easily absorb the increased bond supply, containing upward pressure on yields.

The US corporate market is 75% financed by capital markets, while Europe's is ~80% bank-financed. This structural inversion means Europe is undergoing a long-term, multi-decade shift toward institutional lending, creating a sustained tailwind for private credit growth that is far from mature.

Contrary to fears of a spike, a major rise in 10-year Treasury yields is unlikely. The current wide gap between long-term yields and the Fed's lower policy rate—a multi-year anomaly—makes these bonds increasingly attractive to buyers. This dynamic creates a natural ceiling on how high long-term rates can go.

Concerns over US term premium have receded partly because the Treasury buyer base has stabilized. The declining share of price-insensitive buyers (Fed, foreign investors, banks), which fell from 75% to 50% over a decade, has finally stopped falling, creating a more supportive demand backdrop.

While gross Euro area sovereign bond issuance is set for a new record in 2026, this is primarily driven by Germany. Net issuance for the region will remain similar to 2025 levels, as deficits in other countries are flat or declining, mitigating overall supply pressure.

Germany's finance agency signaled it would adjust debt issuance in response to a steepening yield curve. This sensitivity acts as a structural anchor on intermediate-term yields, creating a potential outperformance opportunity for German bonds versus US and UK debt, which face greater fiscal pressures.

The European Central Bank's stable, "on hold" position has created a low-volatility environment for European rates. This policy predictability supports specific trading strategies, such as tactical range trading, using call spreads instead of outright long duration, and shorting gamma to capitalize on the expectation of continued low delivered volatility.

The modern high-yield market is structurally different from its past. It's now composed of higher-quality issuers and has a shorter duration profile. While this limits potential upside returns compared to historical cycles, it also provides a cushion, capping the potential downside risk for investors.