A US-Iran peace deal sent German Bund yields tumbling and steepened the curve as traders cut ECB tightening bets on lower oil prices.
A US-Iran peace deal sent German Bund yields tumbling and steepened the curve as traders cut ECB tightening bets on lower oil prices.

A US-Iran peace deal sent German Bund yields tumbling and steepened the curve as traders cut ECB tightening bets on lower oil prices.
The 10-year German Bund yield dropped 4.2 basis points to 2.954% on Monday, the biggest one-day decline in three months, as a framework peace deal between the US and Iran pushed Brent crude down 5% and reshaped the inflation outlook for the euro area.
"The bond rally reflects a wholesale repricing of the inflation risk premium that had been baked into European rates since the Strait of Hormuz closure," said John Hardy, head of macro strategy at Saxo Bank. "This is about as supportive as you can get for risk assets."
The 2-year Schatz yield, the most sensitive to ECB policy expectations, fell 4.5 basis points to 2.572%, its lowest in two weeks. The 30-year Bund yield declined 2.3 basis points to 3.526%, while the 2/10 spread widened 0.5 basis points to 38.1 basis points — a modest bull-steepening that signals traders expect lower short-term rates without a recession scare. Trading showed a gap-down open followed by consolidation near 2.95%, forming an L-shaped pattern.
The move relieves pressure on the European Central Bank, which had been wrestling with an energy-driven inflation narrative after Brent peaked at $126 in May. With oil now at $83 and the Strait of Hormuz reopening under a Tehran-Oman regulatory framework, the inflation impulse that had been pushing rate expectations higher is unwinding. The ECB's next policy decision is scheduled for July 16.
The Bund rally was part of a broader cross-asset repricing triggered by the US-Iran accord, which also includes a framework for ending hostilities in Lebanon and defers talks on Tehran's nuclear program. The Stoxx 600 and FTSE Eurofirst both closed at record highs, while Asian markets surged overnight — the Nikkei jumped 5%, South Korea's Kospi gained 5.2% and MSCI's broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan rose 2.4%. US futures pointed to gains of 1.3% to 2% for Wall Street.
The transmission chain was clear: lower oil reduces input costs across the European manufacturing and transport sectors, easing the pass-through to core inflation. Brent crude's slide to $83 a barrel from its May peak of $126 represents a 34% decline, and CBA mining and energy analyst Vivek Dhar forecasts Brent falling to $80 by year-end, assuming the strait does not close again. That outlook gives the ECB room to hold rates at their current level — the deposit rate stands at 3.25% after the last 25-basis-point cut in March — without the urgency to tighten that had been building as oil surged.
The repricing extended across the Atlantic. Two-year US Treasury yields dropped 6 basis points to 4.02%, while the dollar weakened broadly — the euro rose 0.4% to $1.1614 and sterling gained 0.3% to $1.3429. Gold climbed 3% to $4,322 an ounce as lower real yields boosted the non-yielding metal, and bitcoin rose 4% to $65,515.
For the ECB specifically, the Bund rally reduces the risk that the bank would need to accelerate its tightening cycle to contain imported inflation. The last time the 10-year Bund yield fell more than 4 basis points in a single session was March 2026, following weaker-than-expected euro area PMI data. That move preceded a hold decision at the April meeting, suggesting the current repricing could reinforce a similar outcome in July.
The week ahead is packed with central bank meetings across developed markets. The Federal Reserve is widely expected to leave rates at 3.50% to 3.75% at Chair Kevin Warsh's debut on Wednesday, while the Bank of Japan is seen raising rates by 25 basis points to 1% on Tuesday. The Bank of England meets Thursday and is expected to hold at 3.75%. In each case, the Iran deal has lowered the inflation argument for tighter policy, giving central banks more room to hold steady.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.