BOND REPORT: 10-year Treasury Yield Posts Largest Weekly Decline In More Than 4 Months
11 September 2017 - 10:03PM
Dow Jones News
By Sunny Oh
The 10-year Treasury yield close to psychologically significant
2% level
U.S. Treasurys on Friday stabilized, capping an overall decline
in long-dated yields, which saw rates on government paper test
fresh lows on the back of weakening inflation expectations,
President Donald Trump's waning pro-growth agenda, rising
geopolitical risks from North Korea--and a steady stream of flows
from yield-hungry foreign investors.
The moves put the 10-year Treasury yield on the verge of
slipping below 2%, a psychological and technical level that could
trigger a further decline as uncertainty about the economic impact
of Hurricane Irma and other storms in the Atlantic weigh on
appetite for assets perceived as risky, fostering buying in
Treasurys.
For the day, yields for key maturities were flat, keeping intact
sizable declines. The 10-year Treasury note yield slipped 10 basis
points for the five-day stretch to 2.058%, the largest weeklong
decline since April 13.
Similarly, the 2-year Treasury more sensitive to the vagaries of
monetary policy, posted a weeklong fall of 7.5 basis points to
1.270%. The 30-year bond yield dropped about 9 basis points to
2.678%.
Bond buying, which pushes prices higher and yields lower,
subsided somewhat later Friday, helping yields to come off intraday
lows.
Market participants attributed some of those moves to selling
ahead of next week's rush of new issuance, which can pressure
prices on outstanding government paper. The Treasury Department
will auction more than $56 billion of 3-year, 10-year and 30-year
government paper in the coming week.
"There's some setting up for the influx of government supply
next week," said Tom di Galoma, managing director of Treasurys
trading for Seaport Global Securities.
European yields ended mostly lower on the week even as European
Central Bank President Mario Draghi on Thursday delayed an
announcement of tapering the ECB's EUR60 billion asset-purchase
program, indicating that the central bank would broach that topic
at the October policy meeting.
The German 10-year government bond yield rose around 2 basis
points to 0.315% on Friday, compared with 0.379% at the start of
the week.
Yields have remained depressed as geopolitical concerns over a
possible test launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile by
North Korea this weekend unsettled investors. Market participants
were also worried that damages from Hurricane Harvey and Irma could
deal a blow to the economy while scrambling coming data. Doubts
about President Trump's business friendly agenda coming to fruition
also have helped contribute to depressed yields.
And with the chance of an interest-rate increase rapidly
diminishing, investors are snapping up longer-dated bonds that
would otherwise be pummeled during an aggressive tightening cycle.
Traders in the fed-fund futures market downgraded the chances of
the Federal Reserve raising rates as low as 20% from the 40% seen a
few weeks ago, CME Group data show.
A popular exchange-traded fund specializing in long-dated
Treasurys on Thursday attracted the most money in a single day
since May 2011
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/long-dated-treasury-etf-sees-largest-inflows-since-may-2011-2017-09-08),
data from FactSet shows. The iShares 20+ year Treasury Bond ETF
(TLT) drew in $664.7 million of investment, more than doubling the
total amount of inflows this year.
Read: Death toll rises to 10 as Hurricane Irma barrels through
Caribbean, heads for Florida
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/death-toll-rises-to-8-as-hurricane-irma-barrels-through-caribbean-heads-for-florida-2017-09-07)
Those betting on a dovish central bank might have taken some
cues from New York Fed President William Dudley's speech on late
Thursday
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/feds-dudley-shows-no-signs-of-wavering-from-support-for-december-interest-rate-hike-2017-09-07).
He appeared to break from past form when he acknowledged the
troubling persistence of inflation slipping below the central
bank's 2% target.
But his comments on easy financial conditions and lack of
concern over undershooting the Fed's inflation target suggested it
was more of the same, all part of his steady campaign "to put a
December rate hike on the table," wrote Ward McCarthy, chief
financial economist for Jefferies.
Dudley is closely watched by analysts who see him as a
bellwether for policy shifts in the central bank.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
September 11, 2017 07:48 ET (11:48 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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