The 30 -
year bond yield rose 1.5 basis point to...
On average over the past 30 years, when U.S. 5 -
year bond yields rose, about three - quarters of the increase was reflected in Canadian 5 - year bonds.
Not exact matches
LONDON, May 1 (Reuters)- The dollar broke into positive territory for the
year and
bond yields were creeping higher again on Tuesday, as the recent
rise in oil prices fuelled bets that the U.S. Federal Reserve will flag more interest rate hikes this week.
The main stock index dropped by as much as 2.4 percent earlier, while the benchmark 10 -
year government
bond yield rose to 6.944 percent, the highest since August 2017.
LONDON, May 1 - The dollar broke into positive territory for the
year and
bond yields were creeping higher again on Tuesday, as the recent
rise in oil prices fuelled bets that the U.S. May Day holidays across Asia and Europe meant trading was thinner than usual, though there was more than enough news flow to keep those...
NEW YORK, May 1 - The dollar broke into positive territory for the
year and U.S.
bond yields inched higher again on Tuesday as the recent
rise in oil prices fueled expectations the Federal Reserve could flag more interest rate hikes at its policy meeting this week.
That relationship has played out this
year — as interest rates have
risen since January, the HYG high
yield corporate
bond ETF has come under pressure.
Two -
year Treasury
bond yields rose above the average S&P 500 stock dividend in January for the first time since 2008.
Sure enough, the
yield on a Canadian 10 -
year bond has
risen in tandem with its U.S. counterpart since the start of the
year, even as Poloz has signaled caution ahead.
In January, Miller said a
rise in the 10 -
year Treasury
yield above 3 percent «will propel stocks significantly higher, as money exits
bond funds for only the second
year in the past 10.»
Yields on 10
year treasury
bonds, however,
rose.02 % to 1.81 %.
Their declining currencies against the dollar (8 - 9 percent over the past 12 months), falling stock market values since the beginning of the
year and high (India) and
rising (Brazil)
bond yields are reflecting their funding difficulties.
Poland's 10 -
year government
bond yield rose 7 basis points to 3.14 percent, its highest level in four weeks,
rising more than U.S. and German
yields which it often tracks.
Bond yields rose and stocks slumped after an unexpected
rise in consumer inflation to its fastest pace in a
year, making it more likely the Fed will raise interest rates three or more times this
year.
NEW YORK, Feb 5 - The dollar
rose against a basket of currencies on Monday as the U.S.
bond market selloff levelled off after the 10 -
year yield hit a four -
year peak on worries that the Federal Reserve might raise interest rates faster to counter signs of wage pressure.
«Net short positions on 10 -
year Treasury notes are at historical highs, implying that
rising US
bond yields remains among hedge funds» major convictions.»
As a result,
bonds, which
rise in price when
yields drop, had a very good
year in 2014.
Ten -
year Italian
bond yields have
risen 17 basis points to 4.55 percent, since the news of an uncertain outcome spread on Monday but the Italian treasury is going ahead with a sale of 6.5 billion euros ($ 8.5 billion) of 5 and 10 -
year bonds on Wednesday.
Indeed, Randell Moore, who survey's economists as the editor of the Blue Economic Indicators, says the current consensus is for the
yield on the 10 -
year Treasury
bond to
rise to 3.25 % by the end of 2015.
The
yield on the 30 -
year Treasury
bond was at 2.981 percent, after
rising as high as 2.999.
While many analysts were predicting
bond yields to
rise this
year as global economies improve, the suddenness of the move was a large factor in the recent stock market selloff.
Rising inflation expectations in recent months have been reflected in U.K. government
bond (gilt) prices with the
yield on 10 -
year gilts touching its highest level since April this
year at 1.509 percent in Monday's session.
Contributing to the stock market's agita so far this
year has been the prospect that the 10 -
year US Treasury
Bond Yield may be on the verge of
rising above 3.00 %, a level...
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.
China's
bond yields climbed, with the benchmark 10 -
year yield rising as high as 3.346 percent on Friday from 3.233 percent on Thursday.
A
rise in the US 10 -
year yield to 2.998 % (4 -
year high) was dollar supportive, and
rise in global
bond yields also weighed on gold with the German Bund (0.603 % - 0.639 %), UK Gilt (1.49 % - 1.53 %) reaching 1 - month highs.
Although the
yield of a 10 -
year U.S. Treasury
bond has
risen recently to around 2.50 % — that's not too far from where it was at the beginning of 2017 (source: Bloomberg, as of 1/10/2018).
A
rise of 1 - 2 % isn't going to do much, and I don't think we'll
rise by more than 1 - 2 % on the 10 -
year bond yield anyway, so nobody needs to panic.
Western allies press Trump to maintain nuclear deal with Iran: Reuters US intelligence monitors Iranian cargo shipments into Syria: CNN A trade war is a major risk for China's debt - ridden economy: CNBC Federal judge orders gov» t must accept new DACA immigration applications: WaPo Unification of Koreas still unlikely as leaders prepare to meet: Reuters US Consumer Confidence Index rebounded in April after March decline: CB New home sales in US increased to 4 - month high in March: MarketWatch Richmond Fed Mfg Index turns negative for first time since 2016:
Bond Buyer S&P Case - Shiller Home Price Index surged in Feb, up 6.3 % y - o - y: CNBC Federal Housing Finance Agency: US house prices continued to
rise in Feb: HW Corp
bonds with lowest investment - grade rating look vulnerable: Bloomberg 10 -
year Treasury
yield reaches 3.0 % for first time since 2014: CNN Money
Tuesday's
bond activity was relatively quiet, with the
yield on the benchmark 10 -
year note
rising to 2.635 percent after a volatile Monday showed the complicated and sometimes contradictory forces at work.
U.S.
bonds have been rallying for several months, but that came to an abrupt end last week as the
yield on the 10 -
year U.S. Treasury
bond rose to 1.95 % while two -
year yields surged from 0.49 % to nearly 0.65 %.
Bond ETFs saw their highest inflows in three
years in April
Rise in
yields attracted buyersInvestors snapped up fixed - income exchange - traded funds in April, with the category seeing its biggest month of inflows in more than three
years.
The government's 10 -
year bonds rose, pushing
yields to their lowest level this
year, while the benchmark BUX stock index rallied the most in six weeks.
As we've also mentioned before — and as this
year's
bond market behavior emphatically demonstrates — longer - term
bond yields don't have to
rise just because the Fed is hiking rates.
The dollar then had its biggest one day decline in nearly a
year and
bond yields rose.
Canadian 5 -
year mortgage rates have already
risen in response to higher
bond yields, which will act as an additional drag on housing demand in Canada.
The dollar
bond market has turned cold for Indian firms after a record 2017, with
rising global interest rates, geopolitical concerns and market volatility prompting would - be financiers to demand either a higher
yield or invest only in short - term paper maturing in two
years.
We expect long - term
bond yields to
rise gradually over the next five
years but to stay well below historical averages.
These conditions comprise the following: S&P 500 overvalued with the Shiller P / E (the ratio of the S&P 500 to the 10 -
year average of inflation - adjusted earnings) greater than 18; overbought with the S&P 500 within 3 % of its upper Bollinger band (2 standard deviations above the 20 - period average) at daily, weekly, and monthly resolutions, more than 7 % above its 52 - week smoothing, and more than 50 % above its 4 -
year low; overbullish with the 2 - week average of advisory bullishness (Investors Intelligence) greater than 52 % and bearishness below 28 %; and
yields rising with the 10 -
year Treasury
bond yield higher than 6 - months earlier.
At this point, it's human nature to say — as I've often heard from clients over the last 39
years, whenever short rates
rise above long rates — why buy a 20 -
year bond when I get a higher
yield on a 2 -
year piece of paper?
Michael Hasenstab: As we look toward the end of the
year, we have to question whether the type of US government
bond yields we have today make sense given
rising inflation and the resiliency we've seen in the US economy.
From around 5.4 per cent at the time of the previous Statement,
yields on 10 -
year bonds fell to a low of 5.1 per cent in mid December, but have since
risen back to near 5.4 per cent.
The
yield on 10 -
year bonds was 6.60 per cent in early November, a
rise of 1.1 percentage points over the past six months (Graph 30).
Over the last few
years stocks have
risen and
bond yields have fallen (their prices have
risen).
Yields on 10 -
year bonds fell by around 40 basis points, to 5.3 per cent, by early March but are now around 5.9 per cent — a net
rise of 25 basis points since the time of the last Statement.
The euro hit three -
year highs and government
bond yields rose after a hint the ECB boss may rethink how long ultra-loose policy will last.
U.S. government
bond yields and the dollar
rose, while U.S. stocks fell on Sept. 20 after the Federal Reserve signalled it still expects to increase interest rates one more time by the end of the
year despite a recent bout of low inflation.
The recent widening of this spread is, of course, much smaller than was seen in 1994 in the previous episode of globally
rising bond yields, when the
yield on 10 -
year bonds in Australia moved from 1 percentage point to about 3 percentage points above the comparable US
yield.
The more pronounced movements in longer - term
bond yields saw the spread between the
yield on 10 -
year bonds and the cash rate
rise in net terms over recent months to around 65 basis points.
Since the September low point last
year US 10 - Year bond yields have risen 90bps, this compares to 125bps from the low point in July 2016 through to March 2017, or if you count it as one big move they've gone up 158
year US 10 -
Year bond yields have risen 90bps, this compares to 125bps from the low point in July 2016 through to March 2017, or if you count it as one big move they've gone up 158
Year bond yields have
risen 90bps, this compares to 125bps from the low point in July 2016 through to March 2017, or if you count it as one big move they've gone up 158bps.