Yields have spiked across government bond markets in recent weeks, with notable jumps in the United States, United Kingdom ...
The yield on the 2-year Treasury note was down to 4.281%, reflecting growing odds the Federal Reserve finds room to cut by a quarter-point at its December policy meeting.
Longer-term Treasury yields spiked this morning, on top of the surge since the September rate cut. Click to read.
The U.S. bond market is closed for the Veterans Day holiday. A bearish signal has been seen for bonds amid expectations of higher nominal growth in the U.S. over the coming quarters.
What's causing yields to rise? Tariff expectations or tax cuts? Federal Reserve's roadmap to manage inflation and growth The ...
Despite all this good news, we’ve actually seen long-term bonds sell off. 10-year Treasury yields are up +60bps since mid-September to over 4.25%. To understand why, you have to understand what makes ...
Many may balk at the thought of buying a 20- or 30-year Treasury, which yields only 0.3 percentage point more than 10-year paper but carries greater risk of price fluctuations. Indeed, long-term ...
There are two other signals the bond market could be sending. First, rising rates on the long end of the curve could indicate investors are worried about higher price inflation in the long term.
While the catalysts have differed, the moves all indicate that investors may be rethinking their forecasts for a steady decline in long-term government bond yields. But in Europe, these revisions ...
Bond traders on Wall Street dubbed "bond vigilantes" remain worried about long-term economic prospects under ... This, in turn, increases bond yields which can force politicians’ hand against ...