LONDON, Aug 15 (Reuters) - Euro zone bond yields rose on
Friday as markets continued to digest Thursday's hot U.S.
inflation print while awaiting the Alaska summit between U.S.
President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin
later on Friday.
German 10-year yields were up 4 basis points at
2.7453%, while rate-sensitive German 2-year yields
were up 1 bp at 1.9506%.
Germany's 10-year yield rose 7 bps on Thursday after the hot
U.S. inflation figures.
"That could really be the reason that this trend is
continuing from yesterday ... the dynamic was driven by the PPI
in the U.S.," said Christian Reicherter, an analyst at DZ Bank.
On Thursday, U.S. producer price data came in stronger than
expected, renewing inflation concerns and prompting traders to
scale back Federal Reserve rate cut bets.
The key inflation tracker increased by the most in three
years in July amid a surge in the cost of goods and services,
suggesting a broad pickup in inflation was imminent.
U.S. Treasury yields rose, a move that transferred across to
euro zone markets.
While the dynamic continued into Friday, markets are
generally quiet amid thin summer trading, with European stocks
posting marginal gains and the euro ticking higher versus a
broadly softer dollar.
Italy's 10-year bond yield rose 5 bps to 3.56%,
pushing the spread between Italian and German 10-year yields
to 70.2 bps, the tightest since at least 2011,
according to LSEG data.
"Everyone is waiting on more news because this afternoon
there will be several data points from the U.S. that can give us
a hint on how the U.S. consumer is doing," said Reicherter.
U.S. retail sales for July are due later in the session, as
well as import prices for July. Also due is The University of
Michigan's preliminary consumer sentiment index.
While data reads could be something that drive markets
later, no huge surprises are expected, said Reicherter.
Elsewhere, traders are assessing Friday's summit in Alaska.
Trump and Putin will hold talks focused on the U.S.
president's push to seal a ceasefire deal in Ukraine, but with a
last-gasp offer from Putin of a possible face-saving nuclear
accord on the table too.
"I don't expect any real outcome there that could have a
huge impact on the markets" said Reicherter.
The White House said the summit would take place at 11 a.m.
Alaska time (1900 GMT).