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By Benjamin Böninghausen and Andreea Liliana Vladu

Sloping Up: Repricing Of Euro Area Yields In 2025

Over the course of 2025, many debtors in the euro area faced the phenomenon that borrowing over longer time periods has become more costly relative to borrowing over the shorter term. Experts call this a steepening of the yield curve.

The term structure of interest rates is always a prominent topic for financial markets, banks and monetary policymakers. The recent steepening is especially interesting as it is stronger than in previous credit cycles. In fact, in parts of the yield curve we can observe some of the strongest slope increases since the introduction of the euro. In this blog post, we break down the anatomy of the steepening, put the shift into historical perspective and assess the factors behind it.

Let’s start by looking at the euro area risk-free curve, a benchmark for financing costs in all sectors across the economy.[1]

This risk-free curve is based on interest rates on overnight index swap (OIS) contracts that use the euro short-term rate (€STR) as their underlying benchmark. See ECB (2014), “Euro area risk-free interest rates: Measurement issues, recent developments and relevance to monetary policy”, July, on the concept of risk-free rates, and Lane, P.R. (2021), “The compass of monetary policy: favourable financing conditions”, 25 February, on their role in the transmission of euro area monetary policy.

Chart 1 shows where this curve stood at the end of 2025 (top panel, blue curve) compared with the end of 2024 (top panel, yellow curve). It also highlights how risk-free rates at various maturities – that is, different periods over which borrowed funds need to be paid back – changed during that time (bottom panel). The chart further provides historical context by showing the curve’s long-term average since the introduction of the euro (top panel, red curve).

A yield curve has no regular or uniform slope. It can appear in many different forms. A yield curve, whether for swap contracts or for sovereign bonds, can have one slope in one maturity segment and a different slope in another, and the two can even have different signs. However, it is common to reduce such complexity by analysing the shape of a yield curve based on a few key maturities.

We frame our anatomy of the yield curve in terms of the following economically relevant maturities, and present selected drivers that are relevant for risk-free rates, sovereign rates or both:

In 2025 euro area risk-free interest rates remained almost unchanged at the short end[2]

Note that the short end, captured here by the two-year maturity, is different from the very short end of the curve – say, at the three-month maturity. Three-month rates decreased by around 70 basis points, largely as a reflection of cuts in the ECB’s deposit facility rate in the first half of 2025. However, two-year rates remained broadly unchanged as the ECB’s policy rate easing was broadly anticipated at the start of the year.

, but rose significantly at the long and very long ends of the curve (Chart 1, top panel). The ten-year risk-free rate increased by more than 40 basis points (or 0.4 percentage points), while its 30-year counterpart rose by around 90 basis points. As a result, the euro area risk-free curve became steeper in both the two- to ten-year and ten- to 30-year segments.

Strikingly, almost all of this steepening reflects changes in the real component of interest rates as the inflation expectations of investors remained broadly the same (Chart 1, bottom panel). Several factors might be at play here, such as the increased supply of safe assets or a higher potential rate of economic growth.

Chart 2 shows that the steepening was also unusually pronounced at the very long end.

In 2025 the slope between the ten- and 30-year euro area risk-free rates (vertical axis) recorded one of the largest calendar-year changes since the introduction of the euro, surpassed only by 2009, when the steepening was driven especially by a sharp decline at the short end of the yield curve.

The steepening at the very long end is also relatively unusual when compared with the steepening at the long end. The latter – measured by the change in the slope between the two- and ten-year rates (horizontal axis) – is somewhat less remarkable in historical context, but is significant nonetheless. A steepening at the long end tends to be accompanied by a steepening at the very long end, but 2025 stands out for straying visibly from the corresponding regression line.

The euro area risk-free curve is not in an unusual shape right now. On the contrary, the steepening has reversed a historically rare inversion in various segments of the curve. In an inverse yield curve, interest rates at longer maturities are lower than those at shorter maturities. This unusual situation occurred amid significant increases in the ECB’s key short-term interest rates from 2022 onwards. In the case of the very long end, the distinct inversion still prevailed at the end of 2024 (Chart 1, top panel, yellow curve). But after steepening in 2025, the curve was more closely in line again with its average shape over the course of European Monetary Union (Chart 1, top panel, red curve).

So, what’s behind this pronounced steepening? The list of potential drivers is long, and their possible interactions are complex.

For instance, the announcement of a significant fiscal expansion by the German government in early 2025 alone could have helped to raise yields through various channels. These include an anticipation of the increased supply of government bonds and possibly higher potential growth. Add to that rising worries over the sustainability of public debt in major economies globally. Waning demand for long-term sovereign bonds also springs to mind – be it because central banks keep reducing their holdings or because occupational pension reform may leave Dutch pension funds with reduced long-term hedging needs.

Rather than aiming to attribute the steepening to the above factors with precision, we take a bird’s eye view. For one thing, there has been an unusually strong global component behind the steepening of euro area risk-free curves, especially at the very long end. That means common drivers are moving all yield curves in different major economies in a similar way.

https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/blog/date/2026/html/ecb.blog.20260116~4c6200fe58.en.html

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