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Germany 2-Year Government Bond Rates

Germany 2-Year Government Bond Rates data, recent 35 years (traceable to Apr 02,1991), the yield unit is %, latest yield value is 2.62, updated at Apr 02,2026

Price

Current: 99.02 EUR (-0.030 / -0.030%)

Apr 02,2026

Time Range: Apr 02,1991 ~ Apr 02,2026

Average: 100.57 EUR
Median: 100.21 EUR
Max: 107.06 EUR (Jan 31,1994)
Min: 94.25 EUR (Apr 02,1991)

Yield

Current: 2.62 % (+0.017 / +0.650%)

Apr 02,2026

Time Range: Apr 02,1991 ~ Apr 02,2026

Average: 1.46 %
Median: 1.45 %
Max: 5.29 % (Aug 21,2000)
Min: -1.03 % (Mar 09,2020)
Share:

FAQ

Global Government Bond Rates & Historical Data Charts

Track global treasury bond rates with daily historical charts. Access data for US, Germany, Japan, UK, Australia, and China bonds to analyze market trends.

1

Relationship between German 2-year yields and ECB policy?

German 2-year yields are closely related to ECB policy, reflecting market expectations for eurozone monetary policy. When markets expect ECB rate hikes, yields rise; when expecting rate cuts, yields fall.

2

Status of German 2-year bonds in eurozone bond markets?

German 2-year bonds are important benchmarks in eurozone bond markets, seen as the safest short-term investment instruments in the eurozone. Their yield changes affect pricing across the entire eurozone bond market.

3

How does the German 2-year bond compare to the US 2-year bond and what are the impacts?

Both the German 2-year bond (Schatz) and the US 2-year Treasury are key indicators of their respective central bank policy expectations. US Treasury yields are typically higher, reflecting higher economic growth and inflation expectations. Changes in the spread between them affect the EUR/USD exchange rate, with a wider spread favoring the dollar and vice versa.

4

How does the German 2-year bond compare to the Chinese 2-year bond and what are the impacts?

The German 2-year bond is a mature safe-haven asset with low yields. As an emerging market asset, the Chinese 2-year bond offers relatively higher yields but faces greater exchange rate and policy risks. The spread between them reflects the global capital trade-off between safety and yield-chasing.