BOND REPORT: 10-year Treasury Yield Touches 7-month High As Traders Await Fed Pick
October 25 2017 - 11:35AM
Dow Jones News
By William Watts, MarketWatch
2-year yield pushes past 1.60%, the highest level since 2008
Treasurys continued to weaken Wednesday, pushing the yield on
the benchmark 10-year note to its highest level since March, as
investors await President Donald Trump's pick to head the Federal
Reserve once Chairwoman Janet Yellen's term ends in February.
What are yields doing?
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note rose 4 basis points to
2.445%, after earlier trading at a session high aof 2.474%, its
highest mark since March 21, according to FactSet. It broke through
2.40%, a key level, during the previous session.
The 2-year Treasury yield rose 4 basis point to 1.615%, while
the 30-year Treasury bond yield was up 3 basis points at 2.958%.
Yields rise as Treasury prices decline.
What's driving the market?
Trump on Monday said he was very close to announcing his
decision on Fed leadership. In a meeting Tuesday with Republican
senators on Capitol Hill, Trump asked for a show of hands
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/trump-asked-senate-republicans-who-should-be-next-fed-chair-and-john-taylor-reportedly-was-the-winner-2017-10-24)
on who they though should be the next Fed chair, with Stanford
economist John Taylor, who is seen as likely to take a more hawkish
approach, the apparent winner.
New economic data in the morning hinted that growth could heat
up toward the end of the year, and that Friday's third-quarter GDP
number could be higher than expected. Solid business investment and
a faster pace of home sales paint a portrait of an economy picking
up. But unless growth pushes inflation toward the Fed's 2% target,
its difficult to see how the U.S. central bank, an institution
whose main mandate is price stability, can raise interest rates
much higher.
Read:Can a Powell-Taylor ticket at the top of the Fed really
work?
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/can-a-powell-taylor-ticket-at-top-of-the-fed-really-work-2017-10-23)
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/can-a-powell-taylor-ticket-at-top-of-the-fed-really-work-2017-10-23)Investors
are also awaiting a Thursday meeting of the European Central Bank
that's expected to see President Mario Draghi unveil a plan to
begin tapering the bank's monthly asset buying program in
January.
See:Mario Draghi needs to avoid a 'taper tantrum' when the ECB
meets
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/mario-draghi-needs-to-avoid-a-taper-tantrum-when-the-ecb-meets-2017-10-23)
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/mario-draghi-needs-to-avoid-a-taper-tantrum-when-the-ecb-meets-2017-10-23)Also
read:Why Italy faces the worst shock in Europe as ECB prepares to
taper bond buys
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-italy-faces-worst-shock-in-europe-as-ecb-prepares-to-taper-bond-buys-2017-10-24)
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-italy-faces-worst-shock-in-europe-as-ecb-prepares-to-taper-bond-buys-2017-10-24)
What are market participants saying?
"Major bond markets face a possible triple whammy over the next
week or so. President Trump could reveal a more hawkish Fed lineup,
the ECB could taper bond purchases back significantly and the Bank
of England could lift the base rate for the first time in a
decade," said Steven Barrow, currency and fixed-income strategist
at Standard Bank. "But while bonds may wobble on these threats we
don't expect yields to soar at this stage."
Barrow argued that scope for a bond selloff, and a rise in
yields, is limited by inflation's continued failure to show up.
What's on the economic calendar?
Durable goods orders rose 2.2% in September
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/business-investment-surges-again-in-september-durable-goods-report-shows-2017-10-25),
well above the MarketWatch forecast of a 0.7% gain.
New home sales accelerated in September to an annualized pace of
667,000, the fastest pace in a decade
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/new-home-sales-roar-to-a-10-year-high-in-september-2017-10-25).
Economists were expecting new transactions to come in at a 555,000
annual rate.
See:MarketWatch Economic Calendar
(http://www.marketwatch.com/economy-politics/calendars/economic)
(http://www.marketwatch.com/economy-politics/calendars/economic)Economic
Preview: Here's the kind of spending that leads to bigger paychecks
and a roaring economy
(http://www.marketwatch.com/story/heres-the-kind-of-spending-that-leads-to-bigger-paychecks-and-a-roaring-economy-2017-10-21)
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
October 25, 2017 11:20 ET (15:20 GMT)
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