1. The People's Bank of China (PBOC) injected a net 100 billion yuan into the open market in January.
2. The PBOC announced it will conduct 800 billion yuan of outright reverse repurchase operations on February 4th, with a term of three months.
3. The Ministry of Finance plans to issue the 2026 book-entry discount (eighth tranche) treasury bonds.
4. Federal Reserve Governor Milan stated that the Fed needs to cut interest rates by about one percentage point this year.
5. HSBC: Short-term high-yield US Treasuries are more attractive.
6. The market awaits the refinancing details, with US Treasury yields fluctuating narrowly in preparation for the data week.
7. Auction size is expected to remain unchanged; the US Treasury's quarterly refinancing plan maintains a conservative tone.
8. Rising Japanese government bond yields are squeezing US Treasuries, and competition for bonds may push up US debt servicing costs.
9. The Bank of Japan is reportedly not intervening in the sharp drop in Japanese government bonds triggered by the market rally. 10. South Korea's pension fund giant plans to issue its first foreign currency bond to bolster the market; multiple ministries mobilize to address the risk of won depreciation.
11. A surge in Italian bond subscriptions sends a positive signal; the market is optimistic about the prospects of Belgian 30-year bond issuance.
12. MSCI's warning triggers a chain reaction; demand in the Indonesian bond market falls to a one-year low.