Japan Insurers Offload Super-Long JGBs After Yields Spike, Curbing Duration Exposure
Japanese insurers explicitly sold super-long JGBs as yields surged, flooding the market with long-dated paper and pushing 30-year yields higher. The sales reflect a deliberate strategy to slash duration exposure in a rising rate environment, amplifying bearish price action.
- ▼ Japanese insurers offloaded super-long bonds after a sharp yield spike
- ▼ Rising JGB yields triggered institutional duration reduction mandates
- ▲ Insurers could reverse course and buy super-longs if yields stabilize or decline
- ▲ BOJ yield curve control operations might cap the sell-off by purchasing long-dated bonds
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What caused the super-long JGB sell-off?
Insurers sold because yields soared, driving down bond prices. To protect against further capital losses and lock in higher yields, they reduced super-long exposure.
Will 30-year JGB yields keep rising?
In the short term, continued institutional selling could push yields higher, but much depends on BOJ policy signals and the extent of any buyer interest at elevated levels.