Skip to main content

Canada 10-Year Bond Yield 2026 | Current Rate & Economic Impact

Updated

The Canada 10-year government bond yield is one of the most watched indicators in Canadian financial markets. It reflects where investors expect interest rates, inflation, and economic growth to be over the next decade. Unlike the 5-year bond yield (which directly sets 5-year fixed mortgage rates), the 10-year yield is a broader signal about the economy and affects long-term borrowing across the board.

Current 10-Year Bond Yield

The 10-year Government of Canada bond yield changes every business day. For the live rate:

As of early 2026, the 10-year yield has been trading approximately between 3.2% and 3.6%.

What the 10-Year Bond Yield Affects

AreaHow the 10-Year Yield Impacts It
Long-term mortgages (7–10 year terms)Directly — lenders price off this yield
Bond ETF pricesInversely — higher yields mean lower bond prices
Corporate bondsHigher benchmark pushes up corporate borrowing costs
Stock market valuationsHigher yields reduce the present value of future earnings
Dividend stocksCompete with bonds for income investors
Real estateHigher long-term rates increase cap rates and reduce property values
Government debt servicingHigher yields make government borrowing more expensive
Pension fundsHigher yields improve funding ratios

Historical 10-Year Bond Yield

PeriodApproximate 10-Year YieldContext
20005.5–6.0%Pre-crisis normal
2008 (financial crisis)2.5–4.0%Flight to safety
2010–20191.2–2.5%Low-rate era
2020 (COVID)0.4–0.7%All-time lows
20211.0–1.8%Recovery begins
20222.5–3.6%Aggressive rate hikes
20233.0–4.1%Peak rates
20242.8–3.7%Rate cuts begin
20252.7–3.5%Normalization
2026 YTD3.2–3.6%Settling into range

The current 10-year yield is near historical averages. The ultra-low yields of 2010–2021 were abnormal — a product of quantitative easing and near-zero central bank rates.

The Yield Curve

The yield curve shows the relationship between short-term and long-term bond yields:

ShapeWhat It MeansCurrent?
Normal (upward sloping)Long-term yields higher than short-term — healthy economy expectedTypical
FlatShort and long yields nearly equal — uncertaintyTransitional
InvertedShort-term yields higher than long-term — recession signalWatched closely
SteepeningLong-term yields rising faster — growth expectations improvingCan signal inflation

Key Spread: 10-Year Minus 2-Year

SpreadSignal
+1.0% or moreNormal — economy healthy
+0.5% to +1.0%Slightly flat — slowing growth
0% to +0.5%Very flat — caution
Negative (inverted)Recession warning — has preceded every Canadian recession

An inverted yield curve (where the 2-year yield exceeds the 10-year) has been one of the most reliable recession predictors in history. It doesn’t cause recessions but reflects market expectation that the Bank of Canada will need to cut rates aggressively in the future.

What Moves the 10-Year Yield

FactorEffect
Inflation expectations riseYield rises
Inflation expectations fallYield falls
Bank of Canada rate hikesShort-term yields rise; 10-year may lag
Economic growth improvingYield rises
Recession fearsYield falls (flight to safety)
US 10-year Treasury yield risingCanadian 10-year follows
Global risk-off eventsYield falls (demand for safe bonds increases)
Government deficit spendingMore bond issuance can push yields higher
Quantitative easing (QE)Yield falls (Bank of Canada buys bonds)
Quantitative tightening (QT)Yield rises (Bank of Canada stops buying/sells bonds)

The US 10-year Treasury yield is the single largest driver of the Canadian 10-year yield. Capital flows freely between Canadian and US bond markets, keeping the yields closely correlated.

10-Year Yield and Your Investments

Bond ETFs

When the 10-year yield rises, bond ETF prices fall — and vice versa. The longer the duration of the bond ETF, the bigger the impact:

Bond ETF DurationPrice Change for 1% Yield Increase
Short (1–5 years)~-2% to -4%
Medium (5–10 years)~-5% to -7%
Long (10–20+ years)~-10% to -15%

If you hold bonds to maturity (either individual bonds or a bond ladder), short-term price changes don’t matter. If you own a bond ETF, higher yields mean short-term losses but better future returns as the ETF reinvests at higher rates.

Stocks

Stock TypeImpact of Rising 10-Year Yield
Growth stocks (tech)Negative — future earnings worth less today
Dividend stocksNegative — bonds become more competitive for income
Bank stocksOften positive — wider lending margins
Value stocksGenerally neutral to positive
REITsNegative — higher borrowing costs + competing yields

Real Estate

Higher 10-year yields increase long-term borrowing costs, which can:

  • Push mortgage rates higher (especially 7 and 10-year terms)
  • Reduce property valuations (higher cap rates)
  • Slow housing market activity

Canada vs US 10-Year Yield Spread

The spread between Canadian and US 10-year yields reflects relative economic strength:

Spread (Canada minus US)What It Means
Negative (Canada lower)Markets see Canada as slower-growing or cutting rates faster
Near zeroSimilar outlook
Positive (Canada higher)Markets see Canada as stronger or with higher inflation

This spread also affects the Canadian dollar. A widening negative spread (US yields moving higher relative to Canada) typically weakens the CAD as capital flows to higher-yielding US bonds.

Where to Track the 10-Year Yield

SourceDetails
Bank of Canadabankofcanada.ca/rates/interest-rates/canadian-bonds/
Trading Economicstradingeconomics.com/canada/government-bond-yield
Bloombergbloomberg.com — search “GCAN10YR”
Investing.cominvesting.com — search “Canada 10Y”