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Euro zone bond yields steady as Middle East tensions ease, eyes on ECB

A two Euro coin is pictured next to an English ten Pound note in an illustration taken March 16, 2016.  REUTERS/Phil Noble/Illustration
A two Euro coin is pictured next to an English ten Pound note in an illustration taken March 16, 2016. REUTERS/Phil Noble/Illustration Reuters

LONDON - Euro zone government bond yields were steady on Tuesday as easing tensions between Israel and Iran for now calmed fears that their weekend attacks could derail U.S. efforts to broker a peace deal to end the Middle East conflict.

Investors were also awaiting the European Central Bank's policy announcement on Thursday, when the ECB is expected to become the first of the biggest central banks to raise rates since the Iran war unleashed an energy crisis and stoked inflationary pressures.

Iran and Israel said on Monday that they would end military operations following an appeal from U.S. President Donald Trump, as he attempts to secure a peace agreement that would get oil supplies flowing back through the Strait of Hormuz.

A reopening of the Strait could ease worries about energy supplies and reduce expectations for monetary tightening from major central banks.

Germany's 10-year yield, the benchmark for the euro zone, was last at 3.051%, little changed on the day.

ECB SET TO HIKE

The ECB looks set to raise its key deposit rate by 25 basis points to 2.25% on Thursday, its first interest rate move in a year, but the main question for markets is what comes next.

"There is a clear case for retaining a hawkish bias after such a hike," said Gavekal Research economists Cedric Gemehl and August Gudmundsson in a note.

"With a single price stability mandate, the ECB's instinctive response to a shock that has pushed realized and expected inflation above its 2% target will be to lean hawkish to preserve its inflation-fighting credibility, regardless of the nature of the shock."

Money market futures are pricing in 68 basis points of tightening by the end of the year, implying one further quarter-point hike and a more than 70% chance of a third.

Germany's two-year bond yield, which is sensitive to changes in ECB rate expectations, was down 2.5 bps at 2.677%, after hitting an almost three-week high of 2.734% on Monday.

(Reporting by Samuel Indyk; Editing by Susan Fenton)

Copyright Reuters or USA Today Network via Reuters Connect.

This story was originally published June 9, 2026 at 12:39 AM.

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