Bond spread measure comparing a bond's yield with the yield of a government bond of similar maturity.
G-spread, short for government spread, is the difference between the yield on a bond and the yield on a government bond of similar maturity. It is a simple way to express how much extra yield investors demand over a government benchmark.
The benchmark is usually a government bond with a similar maturity rather than the full spot curve.
G-spread matters because it gives investors a quick read on the extra compensation attached to credit risk, liquidity differences, or other non-government-bond risks.
It is useful for:
| Measure | What it compares | Best use | Main limitation |
|---|---|---|---|
| G-Spread | Bond yield versus a similar-maturity government bond | Quick spread comparison and market commentary | Uses one government yield rather than the full curve |
| Z-Spread | Bond price versus the full benchmark spot curve | Richer spread analysis for option-free bonds | More complex than a quick yield-difference measure |
| Option-Adjusted Spread | Spread after stripping out embedded-option value | Callable or prepayable bonds | Model-dependent and less transparent than G-spread |
That is why G-spread is attractive for fast comparison, while Z-spread and OAS are better when structure and cash-flow timing matter more.
If a corporate bond yields 5.40% and a government bond with similar maturity yields 3.10%, the G-spread is 2.30%, or 230 basis points.
A widening G-spread usually signals that the market is demanding more compensation over the government benchmark. A tightening G-spread usually points the other way.
Suppose two corporate bonds each mature in about ten years.
140 basis points.220 basis points.Bond B appears to offer more yield pickup over the government benchmark, but that may reflect higher credit or liquidity risk rather than better value.
A wide spread can reflect real deterioration in credit quality or lower liquidity.
It is designed for quick comparison, not for full curve-aware bond valuation.
Using the wrong government benchmark can make the spread less meaningful.