empty

2026.03.2013:16:00UTC+00Canada 10-Year Bond Yield Climbs Past 3.48%

The yield on Canada’s 10-year government bond has risen above 3.48%, reflecting persistent global inflationary pressures and a more hawkish shift in North American interest rate expectations. This move comes even as Canada’s headline inflation slowed more than expected to 1.8% in February and the unemployment rate climbed to 6.7% after the economy shed 83,900 jobs.

On March 18th, the Bank of Canada held its overnight rate at 2.25% and cautioned that uncertainty remains elevated. In parallel, stronger-than-expected US February PPI data and a more aggressive policy stance from the Federal Reserve pushed 10-year US Treasury yields to their highest levels since August 2025, against a backdrop of intensifying conflict in the Middle East.

Previously, markets had focused on the expanding output gap and easing food prices. However, the persistent risk of energy supply disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz continues to fuel volatility in benchmark yields. Canada’s 10-year bond is now moving in line with a broader global upswing in sovereign yields, as investors scale back expectations and now anticipate, at most, a single rate cut from major central banks this year.

  • Grand Choice
    Contest by
    InstaForex
    InstaForex always strives to help you
    fulfill your biggest dreams.
    JOIN CONTEST
  • Chancy Deposit
    Deposit your account with $3,000 and get $8000 more!
    In March we raffle $8000 within the Chancy Deposit campaign!
    Get a chance to win by depositing $3,000 to a trading account. Having fulfilled this condition, you become a campaign participant.
    JOIN CONTEST
  • Trade Wise, Win Device
    Top up your account with at least $500, sign up for the contest, and get a chance to win mobile devices.
    JOIN CONTEST
  • 30% Bonus
    Receive a 30% bonus every time you top up your account
    GET BONUS


Binary Options are unavailable for trading in this region
Can't speak right now?
Ask your question in the chat.
Widget callback