Treasurys tumbled and inflation expectations lurched to a fresh seven-year high as traders took another tilt at pushing 10-year yields beyond the closely watched 1.6% level.

Yields on the U.S. benchmark rose as much as eight basis points to 1.6177%, near the highest in a year. The rate has failed to close above 1.60% since early 2020, though has surpassed that level in volatile intraday trading several times in recent weeks. The breakeven rate on 10-year notes, a measure of market expectations for annual consumer-price gains based on the yield gap to inflation-linked debt, topped 2.30% in early New York trading Friday, a level it hasn’t breached since early 2014. An equivalent measure for the five-year note touched its strongest level since 2008.

From a technical perspective, 1.61% is an important level for the 10-year Treasury yield, and a failure to break that “invalidates the bearish trend,” said Mohit Kumar, managing director at Jefferies International. “From a macro perspective, around the 1.60% level is when equities start turning expensive versus rates on a risk premium basis.”

The move in global debt started in Australia, where bond futures fell heading into the market’s close to put modest pressure on Treasuries. At around the same time, there was a block sale of 10-year ultra bond futures, followed by a buyer of downside put options—the hedging of which tends to weigh on the market. The three combined to tip 10-year Treasury futures through Thursday’s session low, which unleashed a wave of selling.

As many as 20,000 contracts changed hands in the next five minutes, the largest activity of the day to that point. The speed and severity of the move left many traders perplexed, with volumes in the cash market comparatively modest.

The moves there were most pronounced in some of the longer tenor securities, with the yield curve steepening as two-year rates rose less than two basis points. The front end of dollar funding markets has remained relatively anchored of late with a flood of dollars and supply-demand imbalances in various money markets exerting downward pressure on rates, and even driving levels on repurchase agreements below zero.

European bonds followed Treasuries, with U.K. 10-year yields up five basis points to 0.79%.

With Friday’s sudden spike, Treasury yields have returned to levels seen after the disastrous seven-year U.S. bond auction from Feb. 25. Markets had been looking for a period of calm after the relatively uneventful passage of this week’s debt auctions, with focus switching to the Federal Reserve’s March 17 policy decision.

Still, some point to fundamental factors on show from this week’s sales as the reason for more selling. The indirect bid for the 10-year sale, a proxy for international participation as it includes the likes of foreign central banks, was the lowest since August.

“I was surprised to hear bullish commentaries on the U.S. Treasury auctions because to me they have showed a clear bearish pattern,” said Althea Spinozzi, a strategist at Saxo Bank A/S, who sees this week as a consolidation before the selloff resumes. “They’ve failed to show strong demand from foreign investors, leaving Treasuries prone to volatility as we head into FOMC week, where a 20-year sale and 10-year TIPS auction are going to test the market as well.”

The Federal Open Market Committee’s meeting next week is set to be the next major focus point for traders. In comments last week, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell did note the recent shift up in bond yields, but said little to indicate that officials are willing to push back against it at this stage.

“The bond market is seeking a new equilibrium in the light of a vastly improved economic outlook in both the U.S. and elsewhere,” said Kit Juckes, chief currency strategist at Societe Generale SA. “There will be no peace before we get U.S. 10s to 2%.”

With assistance from Todd Gillespie and Benjamin Purvis.

This article was provided by Bloomberg News.