Yields firm as investors await CB tweaks

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US Treasury yields firmed on Wednesday as investors weighed the chances that the Federal Reserve will lower rates one or more times this year while digesting a plenitude of new Treasury debt and awaiting important inflation data next week.

New supply has been the theme in a week lacking in market-moving economic reports. On Wednesday, the Treasury sold $42 billion in 10-year notes at a high yield of 4.483 percent , a smidge under where the when-issued appeared to be trading on the screens around the close of bidding. The bid-to-cover ratio, an indicators of demand, was 2.49.

That followed a three-year note auction on Tuesday that saw healthy demand.

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Gennadiy Goldberg, head of US rates strategy at TD Securities in New York said that despite a small tail — the difference between the average price and the lowest bid that got a 10-year note at the auction — it and the bid-to-cover were in line with recent averages.

The 10-year yield ticked slightly higher after the auction, which can be a sign of disappointment, and was last up 3.1 basis points on the day at 4.492 percent .

“I would say despite the tail at the auction, it was still relatively strong,” Goldberg said.

The 2-year note yield, which typically moves in step with interest rate expectations, was up 1.3 basis points at 4.8407 percent .

The US Treasury yield curve spread between yields on two- and 10-year Treasury notes seen as an indicator of economic expectations, was negative 38.3 basis points, more inverted than -34.8 basis points late Tuesday.

The 30-year bond yield was up 2.7 basis points at 4.6318 percent . The Treasury will sell $25 billion of 30-year bonds on Thursday.

Yields fell sharply on Friday on news that the economy created fewer than expected jobs in April. The report accelerated a bond rally after the Federal Open Market Committee said the recent uptick in inflation and economic growth were unlikely to derail rate cuts this year. The Federal Reserve all but ruled out rate hikes.

The 10-year yield hit its lowest since April 10 on Tuesday, while on Friday the yield on the 2-year note fell to the lowest since April 5.

The April Producer Price Index report comes on Tuesday, and the closely followed CPI number next Wednesday, which will provide insight on whether inflation has resumed its downward trend toward the Fed’s 2 percent  target rate.

This week brought a full roster of Fed speakers to fine tune the message from last week’s FOMC meeting, which left the fed funds rate in the 5.25 percent -5.50 percent  rangeits been in since July.

On Wednesday Boston Fed President Susan Collins said there were risks to cutting rates too soon but she was optimistic the Fed’s current policy will help slow the economy and can get inflation to target in a reasonable time frame.

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