Start now →

Schroders loads up on Italian government bonds while ditching Treasuries and Bunds

By Editorial Team · Published June 9, 2026 · 3 min read · Source: Crypto Briefing
Market Analysis
Schroders loads up on Italian government bonds while ditching Treasuries and Bunds

Schroders loads up on Italian government bonds while ditching Treasuries and Bunds

The $1 trillion asset manager is betting that Italy has weathered its political storms better than the US or Germany have weathered theirs.

Share

Add us on Google by Editorial Team Jun. 9, 2026

One of the world’s largest asset managers just made a bold call on sovereign debt, and it’s not the one most people would expect.

Schroders, the UK-based investment giant overseeing roughly £814 billion ($1 trillion) in assets, has built what it describes as a “significantly overweight” position in 10-year Italian government bonds. The funding source for that bet: selling down US Treasuries and German Bunds, the two instruments that have long served as the global fixed-income security blankets.

Why Italy, and why now

The logic, according to Dorian Carrell, Schroders’ head of multi-asset income, boils down to a simple thesis. Italy has absorbed its recent rounds of budget drama and political turbulence more effectively than other major sovereign issuers have handled theirs.

Advertisement

The positioning aligns with Schroders’ multi-asset investment views published in May 2026, which explicitly flagged Italian government bonds, known as BTPs, for their attractive yield profile. Italian bonds pay more than their German or US equivalents, and Schroders believes the extra yield is no longer justified by extra risk.

Italian 10-year bonds have historically carried a meaningful spread over German Bunds precisely because investors demanded compensation for Italy’s higher debt levels, coalition government instability, and occasionally chaotic fiscal policy. Schroders is essentially arguing that the risk premium baked into BTPs is now too generous relative to Italy’s actual trajectory.

The case against Treasuries and Bunds

Equally telling is what Schroders is selling to fund the Italian bet.

German Bunds present a specific problem for a multi-asset income strategy: for a mandate designed to generate cash flow for investors, parking capital in low-yielding Bunds is functionally unproductive. The result is a selective pullback from the two most traditional pillars of sovereign debt allocation. Schroders isn’t abandoning them entirely, but the direction of travel is clear: overweight Italy, underweight the old guard.

What this signals for the broader bond market

Intensifying global rate-cut expectations have created an environment where relative value matters more than absolute safety, shifting the question from capital preservation toward which bonds offer the best yield.

The absence of any digital asset component in Schroders’ strategy is also worth noting. The reporting on this move, which broke on or around June 8, 2026 via Bloomberg, contained no mention of crypto tokens or digital assets, confirming that the largest traditional fixed-income managers continue to operate separately from digital asset markets.

For investors watching the macro landscape, the key variable to monitor is whether the Italian spread to Bunds continues to compress. If it does, it validates Schroders’ thesis and likely encourages copycat positioning. If Italy’s political or fiscal situation deteriorates, a trillion-dollar firm just placed a very visible bet on the wrong side of the trade.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.
This article was originally published on Crypto Briefing and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

NexaPay — Accept Card Payments, Receive Crypto

No KYC · Instant Settlement · Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Google Pay

Get Started →