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China Bond Market Update: 30-Year Yield Leads Decline as Chinese Bonds Stay Resilient Amid Middle Ea

China Bond Market Update: 30-Year Yield Leads Decline as Chinese Bonds Stay Resilient Amid Middle Ea

TraderKnowsTraderKnows
04-13
Summary:China’s bond yields moved lower across the curve on April 13, led by a drop in the 30-year tenor. Even as Middle East tensions persisted, oil rose back above $100 and Japanese long-end yields climbed, China’s bond market remained supported by ample l

On April 13th, China's long-term bonds continued to strengthen, forming a stark contrast in the global macro landscape: while Middle Eastern risks have raised oil prices again and long-term overseas yields are rising due to re-inflation concerns, China's bond yields are generally declining, with the 30-year securities leading the market downturn. This divergence is not accidental but is determined by the differences in policy constraints, inflation elasticity, and liquidity conditions faced by different economies in response to the same external shock.

Macro Background

The overseas market is trading on "oil price re-inflation." Reports from Reuters indicate that after the U.S. advanced its shipping blockade on Iran, Brent oil prices jumped about 7% to around $102. The Bank of Japan has explicitly indicated the risk of disturbances to the economy and prices due to Middle Eastern conflicts, with Japan's 10-year government bond yield rising to a 29-year high. In contrast, although China faces imported inflation pressures, due to its energy reserves, price controls, and a relatively stable liquidity environment, the market remains cautiously optimistic about digesting the impact.

Cross-Asset Implications

This means that in response to the same geopolitical shock, different assets show clear divergences in pricing direction. For the overseas bond market, high oil prices correspond to a higher term premium and more cautious expectations of easing; for the Chinese bond market, the shock is more reflected in reduced risk appetite and increased demand for safe havens rather than a rapid upward revision of policy rates. As a result, China’s long-term bonds, compared to equities, foreign exchange, and even overseas interest rate assets, demonstrate stronger stability. The data provided shows the 30-year government bond yields declining significantly faster than the 10-year maturity, reflecting this confluence of "domestic safe-haven + duration trading" leading to advantages in the ultra-long end.

Interest Differentials and Allocation Focus

While Japan's long bond yields are rising, China's 10-year bonds remain at low levels, and the China-Japan interest rate differential continues to invert. Although this change may not directly lead to large-scale cross-border capital shifts, it reinforces domestic institutions' perception of local currency bonds as low volatility, configurable assets. Especially in an environment where the short end is relatively expensive and liquidity is abundant, the long and ultra-long ends naturally become the main direction for capital. Reports from Reuters on Chinese policy expectations also show that major foreign banks have generally weakened their bets on an interest rate cut this year but have not altered their judgment on the continuation of liquidity support.

Risk Outlook

The key for Chinese bonds moving forward is not so much the overseas situation itself but whether the external oil price shocks ultimately translate into changes in domestic prices and growth paths. If imported inflation is smoothly digested, liquidity remains ample, and the expectations for ultra-long-term supply remain favorable, long-term yields are expected to remain strong in volatility; conversely, if the fundamentals improve faster than expected and fiscal supply accelerates, the current curve flattening trade may cool off temporarily. As of April 13th, Chinese bonds remain one of the few stable assets amidst global volatility.

Risk Warning and Disclaimer

The market carries risks, and investment should be cautious. This article does not constitute personal investment advice and has not taken into account individual users' specific investment goals, financial situations, or needs. Users should consider whether any opinions, viewpoints, or conclusions in this article are suitable for their particular circumstances. Investing based on this is at one's own responsibility.

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TraderKnows
Written byTraderKnows
Created date:2026-04-13 14:59
Last Updated:2026-04-13 15:32
Independent Analysis: Manually researched and fact-checked by the TraderKnows Compliance Team, based on public regulatory records.
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Debenture(Bonds)

Bonds or debentures refer to debt securities issued by governments, corporations, banks, or other entities through legal processes. These securities are a promise made to creditors to repay the principal and interest on a specified date in order to raise funds.

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