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- Japan's 10-Year Bonds End Four Days of Losses on Yield Spread
- Ten-year bond futures for March delivery advanced 0.15 to 139.53 yen at the afternoon close on the Tokyo Stock Exchange. The spread between 2- and 10-year ...
- RATE FUTURES REPORT: Poor Bond Sale Weakens Entire Curve
- After Thursday's auction, the March 30-year Treasury bond futures price tumbled to a nearly one-month low, lifting the 30-year cash yield equivalent close ...
- TREASURIES-Sit tight in Asia ahead of 7-year auction
- The spread between the benchmark 10-year Treasury note and Japanese government bond yields JP10YTN=JBTC was 251 basis points, hovering near a two-year high ...
- JGBs slip as Nikkei rises; debt plan taken in stride
- By Masayuki Kitano TOKYO, Dec 28 (Reuters) - Japanese government bond futures slipped on Monday to a two-week low, with some participants closing out ...
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A bond is a debt investment in which an investor loans a certain amount of money, for a certain amount of time, with a certain interest rate, to a company. A government bond is a bond issued by a national government denominated in the country's own currency. Bonds issued by national governments in foreign currencies are normally referred to as sovereign bonds. The first ever government bond was issued by the English government in 1693 to raise money to fund a war against France. It was in the form of a tontine.
Risk-Government bonds are usually referred to as risk-free bonds, because the government can raise taxes to redeem the bond at maturity. Some counter examples do exist where a government has defaulted on its domestic currency debt, such as Russia in 1998 (the "ruble crisis"), though this is very rare.
As an example, in the US, Treasury securities are denominated in US dollars. In this instance, the term "risk-free" means free of credit risk. However, other risks still exist, such as currency risk for foreign investors (for example non-US investors of US Treasury securities would have received lower returns in 2004 because the value of the US dollar declined against most other currencies). Secondly, there is inflation risk, in that the principal repaid at maturity will have less purchasing power than anticipated if the inflation outturn is higher than expected. Many governments issue inflation-indexed bonds, which should protect investors against inflation risk.



