Chinese government bonds see record sell-off amid tightening, looming Fed rate rise
Mainland’s 10-year treasury futures plunged by 1.05 per cent on Monday, the biggest one-day drop since the contract started trading

China’s government bond market saw a record sell-off on Monday, extending losses since the start of October.
Bonds are under intense pressure as Beijing continues to tighten regulations in a bid to deleverage the market, and as a near-certain interest rate increase by the US Federal Reserve looms this week.
China’s 10-year treasury futures for March delivery, the most actively traded contract, plunged by 1.05 per cent on the China Financial Futures Exchange, the biggest one-day drop since the contract started trading. The price has declined 2.16 per cent so far in December, following a 1.73 per cent slump in November.
Five-year treasury futures for March delivery were also down by nearly 0.5 per cent on Monday.
The sell-off in the bond market is partly attributable to the latest tightening measures
The slump comes as China’s government bond yield keeps rising. The yield on the benchmark 10-year government bond with a coupon rate of 2.74 per cent climbed to 3.15 per cent on Monday. A bond price moves inversely to its yield.