Government Bonds yields - 10 Year Notes - List by Country


CountryCurrentLast WeekWeekly ChgLast MonthMonthly ChgLast YearYearly Chg
Greece 33.9734.16-0.1834.95-0.9811.3022.67View Chart
Portugal 15.2214.620.6013.202.026.888.34View Chart
Brazil 12.5512.530.0212.340.2212.380.17View Chart
Pakistan 12.2912.39-0.1012.81-0.5214.26-1.97View Chart
India 8.898.93-0.048.790.108.100.79View Chart
Hungary 8.779.31-0.549.37-0.607.611.16View Chart
Ireland 8.218.210.008.210.009.06-0.85View Chart
South Africa 8.208.200.008.200.007.930.28View Chart
Colombia 7.607.600.003.633.977.010.59View Chart
Peru 6.766.760.006.760.005.521.24View Chart
Russia 6.006.000.006.000.005.590.42View Chart
Mexico 5.986.05-0.086.37-0.397.41-1.44View Chart
Italy 5.906.25-0.356.98-1.084.711.19View Chart
Poland 5.625.67-0.065.85-0.236.34-0.72View Chart
Indonesia 5.506.17-0.666.10-0.609.20-3.70View Chart
Spain 4.975.49-0.525.38-0.415.20-0.24View Chart
Israel 4.554.480.074.530.024.79-0.24View Chart
New Zealand 3.923.870.053.840.075.58-1.66View Chart
Australia 3.813.82-0.013.740.085.65-1.84View Chart
South Korea 3.803.82-0.023.84-0.044.73-0.93View Chart
Belgium 3.694.10-0.414.10-0.414.20-0.51View Chart
Malaysia 3.573.58-0.013.72-0.154.10-0.53View Chart
China 3.403.400.003.49-0.094.00-0.60View Chart
Czech Republic 3.243.51-0.283.67-0.444.06-0.82View Chart
Thailand 3.203.190.013.24-0.043.71-0.51View Chart
France 3.033.09-0.063.010.023.49-0.46View Chart
Austria 2.943.06-0.123.03-0.093.51-0.57View Chart
Norway 2.402.220.172.43-0.043.88-1.49View Chart
Finland 2.282.31-0.032.44-0.163.35-1.07View Chart
Netherlands 2.182.24-0.062.31-0.133.32-1.14View Chart
United Kingdom 2.072.11-0.052.040.033.70-1.63View Chart
Canada 1.992.06-0.082.01-0.023.33-1.34View Chart
United States 1.892.02-0.132.02-0.133.40-1.51View Chart
Germany 1.861.93-0.071.96-0.103.18-1.32View Chart
Denmark 1.851.830.021.820.033.17-1.32View Chart
Sweden 1.771.770.001.720.053.35-1.58View Chart
Singapore 1.561.63-0.061.66-0.102.62-1.06View Chart
Hong Kong 1.321.39-0.071.47-0.152.73-1.41View Chart
Japan 0.970.99-0.020.98-0.011.22-0.25View Chart
Switzerland 0.770.79-0.020.700.071.90-1.13View Chart

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This page displays government bonds yields taken from 10 year notes for several countries. A government bond is a bond issued by a national government denominated in the country's own currency. Bonds issued by national governments in foreign currencies are normally referred to as sovereign bonds. The first ever government bond was issued by the English government in 1693 to raise money to fund a war against France. Government bonds are usually referred to as risk-free bonds, because the government can raise taxes to redeem the bond at maturity. Some counter examples do exist where a government has defaulted on its domestic currency debt, such as Russia in 1998 (the "ruble crisis"), though this is very rare. As an example, in the US, Treasury securities are denominated in US dollars. In this instance, the term "risk-free" means free of credit risk. However, other risks still exist, such as currency risk for foreign investors (for example non-US investors of US Treasury securities would have received lower returns in 2004 because the value of the US dollar declined against most other currencies). Secondly, there is inflation risk, in that the principal repaid at maturity will have less purchasing power than anticipated if the inflation outturn is higher than expected. Many governments issue inflation-indexed bonds, which should protect investors against inflation risk. Bonds are issued by public authorities, credit institutions, companies and supranational institutions in the primary markets. The most common process of issuing bonds is through underwriting. In underwriting, one or more securities firms or banks, forming a syndicate, buy an entire issue of bonds from an issuer and re-sell them to investors. The security firm takes the risk of being unable to sell on the issue to end investors. However government bonds are instead typically auctioned. A bond is a debt security, in which the authorized issuer owes the holders a debt and, depending on the terms of the bond, is obliged to pay interest (the coupon) and/or to repay the principal at a later date, termed maturity. A bond is a formal contract to repay borrowed money with interest at fixed intervals. Thus a bond is like a loan: the issuer is the borrower (debtor), the holder is the lender (creditor), and the coupon is the interest. Bonds provide the borrower with external funds to finance long-term investments, or, in the case of government bonds, to finance current expenditure. Certificates of deposit (CDs) or commercial paper are considered to be money market instruments and not bonds. Bonds must be repaid at fixed intervals over a period of time (source: wikipedia).


GLOBAL ECONOMIC NEWS

U.S. Jobless Rate Down to 8.3%, Nonfarm Payrolls Up by 243K
Published: 2/3/2012 1:40:28 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
Total U.S. nonfarm payroll employment rose by 243,000 in January, and the unemployment rate decreased to 8.3 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Total U.S.nonfarm payroll employment rose by 243,000 in January, and the unemployment rate decreased to 8.3 percent, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported on February 3rd. Job growth was widespread in the private sector, with large employment gains in professional and business services, leisure and hospitality, and manufacturing.

Canada's Unemployment Rate Up to 7.6% in January
Published: 2/3/2012 12:13:03 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Statistics Canada
Canada's unemployment rate edged up 0.1 percentage points to 7.6% as more people searched for work. Compared with 12 months earlier, employment rose by 129,000 (+0.7%), with most of the growth occurring in the first six months of this period.

Swiss Exports Declines in December
Published: 2/2/2012 2:55:20 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, ABS
Exports from Switzerland fell in December, hurt by turmoil in the Euro Zone which slashed demand for Swiss goods and drove the franc currency to unfavorably strong levels as investors looked for a safe place to park their money.

New Zealand Reports Trade Surplus in December
Published: 2/2/2012 2:29:02 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Statistics New Zealand
In December 2011, New Zealand reported a trade surplus equivalent to $338 million (7.8 percent of exports). This compares with an average deficit of 5.2 percent of exports over the previous five December months.

Australian Trade Surplus Widens in December
Published: 2/2/2012 1:12:25 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, ABS
In seasonally adjusted terms, the balance on goods and services was a surplus of $1,709m in December 2011, a rise of $366m on the surplus in November 2011.

Euro Area Unemployment Rate at 10.4% in December
Published: 1/31/2012 1:46:43 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Eurostat
The euro area (EA17) seasonally-adjusted unemployment rate was 10.4% in December 2011, unchanged compared with November. It was 10.0% in December 2010.

Japan Annaual Inflation Rate Down 0.2% in December
Published: 1/27/2012 6:03:21 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications
The consumer price index for Japan in December 2011 was 99.4(2010=100), the same level as the previous month, and down 0.2% over the year.

U.S. Economy Expands 2.8% in Q4
Published: 1/27/2012 5:44:01 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Bureau of Economic Analysis
U.S.real gross domestic product increased at an annual rate of 2.8 percent in the fourth quarter of 2011 (that is, from the third quarter to the fourth quarter), according to the "advance" estimate released by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

U.S. Fed Said No Rate Hikes Until at Least Late 2014
Published: 1/25/2012 5:50:33 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, Fed
The U.S. Federal Reserve on Wednesday said it will not raise interest rates until at least late 2014, even later than investors expected, in an effort to support a sluggish economic recovery.

UK GDP Contracts 0.2% in Q4
Published: 1/25/2012 5:05:00 PM By: TradingEconomics.com, ONS
UK GDP for the fourth quarter of 2011 dropped by 0.2%, a worse than expected figure that will heighten fears of a double-dip recession.