Early Wednesday saw a rise in U.S. bond yields, marking a shift from the economic growth concerns that had led to significant stock market risk-aversion and a rush into haven sovereign debt earlier in the week.
The benchmark 10-year Treasury yields had previously dropped to a multi-month low of around 3.67% on Monday. This decline was driven by fears about the U.S. economy's health, following weaker-than-expected jobs data and a significant sell-off in global stock markets, prompting investors to seek the safety of government bonds.
However, these concerns have diminished in recent sessions. Positive U.S. service sector data released later on Monday exceeded expectations, leading to a rally in stock markets. As a result, by early Wednesday, the 10-year yield had climbed back above 3.9%.
Jim Reid, a strategist at Deutsche Bank, noted, “The relatively orderly improvement in equity markets saw fixed income retreat…as markets inevitably dialed back on Fed cut expectations.”
Investors are now pricing in a 63.5% probability that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates by at least 50 basis points from the current range of 5.25% to 5.50% at its next meeting on September 18th. This is a slight decrease from the 68% probability noted the previous day, according to the CME FedWatch tool.
The rise in U.S. bond yields reflects a waning of earlier economic growth fears. The initial flight to safety that saw a rush into sovereign debt, driven by weak jobs data and a global stock market sell-off, has reversed as positive service sector data and recovering stock markets have reassured investors. This has led to a recalibration of expectations regarding Federal Reserve rate cuts. Investors now await the results of the upcoming Treasury auction and the release of consumer credit data for further market cues.
As a leading independent research provider, TradeAlgo keeps you connected from anywhere.