The 10 -
year Treasury yield fell just 1 basis point, while the 30 - year mortgage rate remained unchanged at 3.83 percent.»
«In a short week following Presidents Day, the 10 -
year Treasury yield fell about 8 basis points,» Sean Becketti, Freddie Mac chief economist, said in a statement.
«In a short week following Presidents Day, the 10 -
year Treasury yield fell about eight basis points; however, the 30 - year mortgage rate rose one basis point to 4.16 percent,» says Sean Becketti, Freddie Mac chief economist.
«After holding relatively flat last week, the 10 -
year Treasury yield fell four basis points this week,» says Sean Becketti, chief economist at Freddie Mac.
«The 10 -
year Treasury yield fell 3 basis points this week,» says Sean Becketti, chief economist, Freddie Mac.
«The 10 -
year Treasury yield fell five basis points this week.
«The 10 -
year Treasury yield fell just one basis point, while the 30 - year mortgage rate remained unchanged at 3.83 percent.»
Since the bond market's «flash crash» back in October — when US 10 -
year Treasury yields fell 34 basis points, or 0.34 % in one morning — concerns regarding liquidity and how resilient the bond market might be to shocks have lingered around the market.
After rising to roughly 2.60 % in early March — when consumer confidence was near its recent zenith — 10 -
year Treasury yields fell to around 2.15 % by mid-June.
Even when 10 -
year Treasury yields fell to zero, mortgage interest rates would be a few points higher.
Not exact matches
In the bond market, the 10 -
year US
Treasury yield fell less than 1 basis point, to 2.79 %, near the key 3 % level that traders are closely watching.
Instead of shooting skyward after the Federal Reserve hiked interest rates last week,
yields on the 10 -
year Treasury note
fell — and have been steadily
falling ever since.
But
yields on the 10 -
year Treasury fell after the announcement from the IMF, suggesting that traders might believe that the IMF statement signals a shifting of attitudes on the likelihood of a September interest rate hike.
The
yield on the 10 -
year Treasury fell below 2 % for the first time since May 2013 in early trading in Europe, while gold rose to a three - week high of $ 1.213.60 a troy ounce, as investors once again shunned anything that smelled remotely of risk.
Rates on government bonds in Germany and Switzerland
fell further into negative territory after Brexit, while
yields on 10 -
year Treasuries dropped below 1.5 % and touched record lows.
Bond prices
fell, sending the
yield on the U.S. 10 -
year Treasury note to its highest level in four
years, following newly released minutes from the U.S. Federal suggesting bullish sentiment among policy - makers and signalling more interest rate hikes ahead.
Italian 10 -
year bond
yields fell 2.5 basis points (bps) to 1.754 percent while other euro zone
yields were pushed higher by a sell - off in U.S.
Treasuries and data suggesting the euro zone economy was not as weak as expected.
The benchmark 10 -
year Treasury note
yield TMUBMUSD10Y, -0.75 %
fell 2 basis points to 2.814 %, while the 30 -
year bond
yield TMUBMUSD30Y, -0.77 % slipped 3.3 basis points to 2.998 %, its third straight decline.
The 10 -
year Treasury note's
yield, which serves as a benchmark for everything from U.S. mortgages to borrowing costs for municipalities,
fell in November to as low as 2.3 percent and topped out at 2.41 percent.
Looking forward, even if you assume bond
yields settle down, probably somewhere in last
fall's range of 2.2 % to 2.6 % for the 10 -
year Treasury note, this moderate
year - to - date rise is still likely to inflict significant damage on parts of the market.
U.S.
Treasury yields fell as Japan's 10 -
year yields went negative and German bund
yields sank.
Last Friday, the
yield on the 10 -
year Treasury fell to as low as 1.385 percent, an all - time record.
Over the weekend, Jeff Gundlach, the CEO of investment services firm DoubleLine told Barron's that he believed the 10 -
year Treasury yield could test the 2012 low of 1.38 percent if the price of oil
fell below $ 40 a barrel.
Treasury bond prices rallied and
yields on the 10 -
year fell to between 2.8 % and 2.85 % following the release of benign inflation data and weaker - than - expected retail sales figures.
The
yield on the 10 -
year Treasury fell more than 15 basis points to 2.05 percent in the last two days of the week.
On 15 October, the
yield on 10 -
year US
Treasury bonds
fell almost 37 basis points (Graph 2, left - hand panel), more than the drop on 15 September 2008 when Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average DJIA, +0.02 % has
fallen by 440 points since the Fed statement was released but the 10 -
year Treasury note
yield has held roughly steady at 2.94 %.
With respect to interest rates, after having
fallen back below 1.35 % on the 10 -
year Treasury note, last summer,
yields have climbed steadily this
fall.
The US
treasury has been in a 35 -
year bull market; the
yield having
fallen from 15 % to 1.8 %.
Meanwhile, one measure of the
yield curve, the difference between the 10 -
Year Treasury Note rate and the 3 - month
Treasury Bill rate,
fell by 7 basis points.
When the
yields on the 10 -
Year US
Treasury Note rise, it indicates that the demand for the American securities
falls, Grachev explains.
«The 10 -
year Treasury yield dipped six basis points, while the 30 -
year fixed mortgage rate
fell three basis points down to 3.88 percent.»
The 10 -
year Treasury note
yield TMUBMUSD10Y, -0.18 %
fell 1.9 basis points to 2.946 %, while the 30 -
year bond
yield TMUBMUSD30Y, -0.33 % shed 1.1 basis points to 3.123 %.
Ten -
year US
Treasury note
yields fell to 2.40 % from a pre-Christmas level of 2.53 %.
The
yield on the 10 -
year US
Treasury bond
fell 2.9 % this week to 2.34 %, as of early Friday morning.
The 10
year Treasury yields had been 2.84 %, lifted to 2.92 % on the announcement, and then
fell back to 2.88 %.
Last week, bond
yields fell and prices rose, with 10 -
year U.S.
Treasury yields hitting a one - month low of 2.1 %.
The difference in
yield between two -
year and 10 -
year Treasuries recently
fell below 50 basis points (source: Bloomberg).
Benchmark
Treasury yields fell close to 2 %, their lowest level thus far this
year.
This return also
falls below what seven -
year Treasury bonds were
yielding at the time, which was 6.1 percent.
Since then benchmark
Treasury yields, generally thought at the beginning of the
year to move higher, decided to
fall instead.
Treasury bond prices
fell Thursday, pushing the
yield on 10 -
year notes to 3 %, a threshold that may signal a new baseline for higher interest rates.
«My fear is that
Treasury yields fell so much in the past
year that if they continue to rise,» he added, «their prices will
fall much harder than those of investment - grade corporate ETFs.»
After being relatively stable at around 4 per cent over April, US
yields on 10 -
year treasury bonds
fell to 3.1 per cent by mid June (Graph 9).
Despite the strong data, the
yield on the 10 -
year US
Treasury note
fell to 2.415 % from 2.43 % a week ago.
The
yield on the benchmark 10 -
year Treasuries slipped 1 basis point to 2.95 percent, the super-long 30 -
year bond
yields also
fell 1 basis point to 3.12 percent and the
yield on the short - term 2 -
year traded 1-1/2 basis points lower at 2.48 percent by 10:45 GMT.
US 10 -
year Treasury note
yields fell six basis points to 2.14 % on the week while West Texas Intermediate crude oil dipped 80 cents a barrel to $ 46.75.
The
yield on 10 -
year U.S.
Treasury notes slipped slightly to 2.96 per cent following the release of the statement, while the S&P 500 Index of U.S. stocks climbed to its highest level of the day and the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index
fell.
The increasingly strident rhetoric from both sides and absence of consensus among major powers on how to respond to North Korea's actions increased uncertainty, and by early September benchmark
Treasury yields had
fallen to their lowest level so far this
year.
Specifically, the «Fed Model» — the notion that equity earnings
yields and 10 -
year Treasury yields should move in tandem — is an artifact restricted to the period between 1980 and 1997, when both equity and bond
yields fell in virtually one - for - one lock - step — bond
yields because of disinflation, and equity
yields because of what was actually a move from extreme secular undervaluation to extreme secular overvaluation.