The yield of the ten-year German bond, considered the safest in

Europe

, rose this Wednesday to 0.003%, trading at positive rates for the first time since the beginning of May 2019.

Yields on German debt and the rest of European countries have been rising for several weeks due to market fears that longer inflation will lead central banks to accelerate the withdrawal of stimuli.

This inflationary fear is driven by a new rise in the price of crude oil which, in the case of

Brent

, the benchmark in Europe, is trading today at new highs for seven years.

In this context, the US

debt

has also climbed in recent sessions, and today it reaches 1.887%.

In the rest of Europe, and following in the footsteps of the German bond, the yield on public debt is also rising.

In

Spain

, the ten-year bond reaches 0.685%;

in

Portugal

, 0.607%;

in

Italy

, 1.348%, and in

Greece

, 1.606%.

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