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Posted: 2023-03-14 07:00:14

Tuesday was an extraordinary day for bond market traders as they witnessed extreme price movements — and this matters for millions of Australians because the price movements reflect where interest rates are heading. 

"Bond market moves have been very powerful over the last few days," Angus Coote, co-founder and head of investments at Jamieson Coote Bonds, told the ABC.

"We have seen a flight to buy high-quality government-backed bonds both in Australia and offshore markets, as investors move away from riskier-type assets — which is typical in stressful periods."

Over the past 24 hours, short-term bond prices (IOUs between banks over days and months) in Australian and international debt markets have surged, and yields (interest rates) have plunged.

The yield on two-year US Treasuries fell almost 60 basis points (0.6 percentage points) at one point in overnight trade (Australian time) to just over 4 per cent.

The yield has now dropped a full percentage point since the middle of last week.

What does this drop in interest rates on bonds mean?

Analysts say the market drop in the interest rates on bonds is on par with what occurred after the "Black Monday" share market crash in October 1987.

The growing fear in financial markets relates to unease about the health of thousands of mid-tier banks in the US.

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