(Bloomberg) -- European bonds fell for the first day
in four, snapping the longest winning run in two months, as signs
growth and inflation in the region are quickening underpin
speculation the European Central Bank will lift interest rates.
The drop in debt pushed 10-year bund yields up from a three-
week low as investors bet on two more interest-rate increases by
the ECB. Euro-region money supply growth probably held near the
fastest in 24 years in May, a Bloomberg survey showed. The
Federal Reserve will probably keep its key rate on hold today
citing inflation, which may halt debt market gains worldwide.
Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News
in four, snapping the longest winning run in two months, as signs
growth and inflation in the region are quickening underpin
speculation the European Central Bank will lift interest rates.
The drop in debt pushed 10-year bund yields up from a three-
week low as investors bet on two more interest-rate increases by
the ECB. Euro-region money supply growth probably held near the
fastest in 24 years in May, a Bloomberg survey showed. The
Federal Reserve will probably keep its key rate on hold today
citing inflation, which may halt debt market gains worldwide.
Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News
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