(Updates at 1443 GMT)
By Stefano Rebaudo and Samuel Indyk
Sept 11 (Reuters) - Euro zone government bond yields
fell on Wednesday after a moderate rise in U.S. consumer prices,
which should allow the Fed cut interest rates next week even
though it is likely to dissuade them from an outsized 50 basis
point move.
Germany's 10-year yield, the benchmark for the
euro zone, was down 5.5 basis points (bps) at 2.094%, its lowest
level since the market turmoil on Aug. 5.
U.S. benchmark 10-year yields, which had earlier
fallen to a 15-month low of 3.605%, were down 2 bps at 3.6217%.
Bond yields move inversely to prices.
The U.S. consumer price index rose 0.2% last month, the
Bureau of Labor Statistics said on Wednesday, taking the annual
rate to 2.5%, its smallest year-on-year increase since February
2021.
Core CPI - which strips out food and energy components -
rose 0.3%, above expectations of 0.2%.
"Given inflation has now steadied at a consistent level, a
rate cut next week is now a near certainty," said Lindsay James,
investment strategist at Quilter Investors, who added a larger
50 bp move was unlikely this month until the market sees a
clearer picture from the labour market.
Money market traders still fully priced a 25 basis point
rate cut next week but lowered bets on a 50 bp move after the
data, now seeing about an 15% chance of a jumbo Fed cut, down
from about 29% beforehand.
For the European Central Bank, which announces its latest
policy decision on Thursday, markets are betting on a
quarter-point move, following a previous rate cut in June.
They also discounted around 62 bps of ECB rate cuts in 2024
, implying two 25 bps moves and almost a 50%
chance of a third cut.
"(ECB President Christine) Lagarde is likely to underscore
data dependency and taking a meeting-by-meeting approach, as
well as emphasising the ECB's independence from the Fed,"
analysts at Nomura said in a note.
The size and importance of the U.S. economy often drives
financial markets and influences other central banks around the
world.
Germany's two-year yield, which is sensitive to
monetary policy expectations, was down 7 bps at 2.131%, its
lowest since March 2023.
Bond yields had already been lower earlier in the day after
Tuesday's U.S. presidential debate, where Kamala Harris put
rival Donald Trump on the defensive, fuelling expectations for a
decline in U.S. interest rates. Investors expect trade tariffs
and higher spending would boost rates if Trump wins.
For Bunds, the effect of a Trump victory is somewhat
ambiguous, analysts argued. Trade tariffs would have an
inflationary impact but also drag on the economy, lowering
rates. Heightened geopolitical tensions would also weigh on
global yields.
Italy's 10-year yield was down by 6.5 bps at
3.454%, its lowest since August 2022.
The gap between Italian and German Bunds - a
gauge of the risk premium investors demand to hold Italian
government bonds - stood at 135 bps.
Italy's new extra-long bond launched on Tuesday attracted
record demand as the country's bond yields remain attractive
ahead of an anticipated interest rate cut from the ECB.
(Reporting by Stefano Rebaudo and Samuel Indyk, editing by
Angus MacSwan and Ros Russell)