NEW YORK – Longer-dated U.S. Treasury yields fell on Friday after a volatile week driven by concerns about the U.S. economic outlook, while investors turned to key inflation data next week for fresh clues on the potential size of an expected September rate cut.
Yields have regained ground over the week after a dramatic bond rally sent them to more than one-year lows on Monday, with stock markets also recovering from a rout that was in part blamed on the unwind of popular dollar/yen carry trades.
A bigger-than-expected drop in jobless claims on Thursday helped ease worries about the possibility of an imminent U.S. recession. Concerns rose after last Friday’s non-farms payroll report showed an unexpected increase in unemployment.
“The main theme of the bond market at the beginning of the month was concerns about the state of the labor market and the future path of the Fed,” said Lou Brien, market strategist at DRW Trading in Chicago. Then “there was a lot of noise that was added onto markets because of the Yen carry trade.”
That trade involves borrowing yen at a low cost to finance U.S. asset purchases, including tech stocks. However, a sharp rise in the yen against the U.S. dollar led traders to unwind these positions.
Yields on interest rate-sensitive two-year notes rose 1.1 basis points on the day to 4.055% and are up 18 basis points on the week, the biggest one-week increase since March.
Benchmark 10-year note yields fell 5.3 basis points to 3.944% and are up 15 basis points this week, the largest one-week increase since April.
The yield curve between two- and 10-year Treasury notes flattened 6 basis points to minus 11 basis points. It reached 1.50 basis points on Monday, turning positive for the first time since July 2022.
The Fed is expected to cut rates at its next policy meeting on Sept. 17-18, but traders are grappling with whether a 25 or 50-basis point reduction is more likely.
Stephen Gola, head of U.S. Treasuries Sales & Trading at StoneX Group in New York, said that markets may be overestimating the odds of a 50 basis points cut.
The Fed has “been very deliberate and slow-moving trying to adhere to their own tenet of policy working with long and variable lags,” he said. “Rush it when you need to, but otherwise we do live in a 25 basis point increment world and we’re not falling apart at the seams.”
Traders are currently pricing in a 51% probability of a 50 basis point cut, and 49% odds of a 25 basis point reduction, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch Tool. A 50 basis-point cut had been fully priced in on Monday and traders had begun speculating on a possible emergency cut before September.
Fed policymakers on Thursday said they are increasingly confident that inflation is cooling enough to allow interest-rate cuts ahead, and they will take their cues on the size and timing of those rate cuts not from stock-market turmoil but from the economic data.
Consumer price data on Wednesday is the next major data point and is expected to show that inflation continues to edge down closer to the Fed’s 2% annual target.
According to economists polled by Reuters, annual core price growth is expected to slow to 3.2% in July, from 3.3% in June, and headline prices are expected to stay steady with a 3% annual gain.
“I’m concerned about a surprise on the headline if there’s anything quirky in the data, but our base case is inflation is moving lower,” said Zachary Griffiths, senior investment grade strategist at CreditSights in Charlotte.
“The economy is slowing, driven by the consumer that’s just running out of steam, running out of excess savings and starting to see this increase in the unemployment rate, which should work its way through to the spending and inflation numbers.”
Assuming there are no upside surprises in inflation, jobs data and the unemployment rate in particular will likely remain the key focus for traders.
“Concerns about the state of the labor market and the pace that the Fed’s going to go remain valid and will come more clearly into focus over the coming weeks,” said DRW’s Brien. “A lot of the components of the labor market have been weakening for a substantial amount of time and will continue to.”
Comments by Fed Chair Jerome Powell at the Fed’s Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium on August 22-24 may also provide new clues on the path of rate cuts.
(Source: ReutersReuters)