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Bahrain Government Bond Yield Curve

Numero massimo di curve da aggiungere al grafico -
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Bahrain yield curve is a graphical representation of interest rates on Bahraini government bonds across different maturities. This benchmark is used to assess government borrowing costs across various time horizons and to analyze conditions in the domestic sovereign debt market. The curve includes 6 tenors ranging from 3 months to 5 years. Values are published on each business day for the previous trading day.

FAQ

  • How should different yield curve shapes be interpreted in the context of economic expectations?

    The shape of the yield curve is a key indicator of market expectations for future economic growth and monetary policy. Four main configurations are generally distinguished:
    • A normal curve signals expectations of sustained GDP growth, moderate inflation, and a neutral or more accommodative central-bank stance in the future. Long-term rates exceed short-term rates because investors demand a risk premium for holding longer-dated assets.
    • An inverted curve is a classic leading indicator of recession: the market prices in aggressive future cuts to the policy rate in response to an expected economic slowdown or crisis, causing short-term rates to rise above long-term rates.
    • A flat curve indicates uncertainty or a transition between expansion and contraction, or expectations that the central bank will pause after a rate-hiking cycle. The spread between long- and short-term rates becomes minimal.
    • A humped curve indicates expectations of temporary policy tightening or a medium-term inflation surge, followed by a return to lower rates and greater stability over the long term. Rates in the middle segment exceed those at both the short and long ends of the yield curve.
  • Which spreads between curve tenors best reflect macroeconomic expectations in Bahrain?

    The choice of tenor combination depends on the forecasting objective. For inflation analysis, the forecast horizon should correspond to the maturity gap; a standard example is the 5Y–1Y spread for a five-year horizon. For assessing future economic activity, it is generally more effective to use the widest spread available on the curve, i.e. the difference between the longest and shortest tenors. The 10Y–2Y spread is the standard benchmark in this context. Where the standard 10Y–2Y spread is unavailable, it can be replaced by the spread between the longest and shortest available tenors.
  • What are the key characteristics of the short and long ends of the curve within its available tenor range?

    The curve spans a range from 3 months to 5 years and comprises 6 tenor points.
    - The short-end segment (3 months–1 year) lacks very short-term rates and contains few points, so its signals are broader and do not capture the market’s immediate reaction to central-bank policy.
    - The “long segment” is limited to the 2Y and 5Y points. This segment reflects medium-term economic expectations rather than the deeper structural trends captured by curves extending to 30 years.
  • When are the new Bahrain yield curve values published?

    Curve values are published on each business day for the previous trading day. For example, data for 6 May 2026 are published on 7 May 2026.

I dati sulle curve presenti nella pagina sono disponibili per gli ultimi 3 anni — l'accesso a dati aggiuntivi è disponibile tramite l'API Cbn-data

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