U.S. debt that’s the most responsive to changes in Federal Reserve policy is leading the fallout from this week’s shock inflation print.
Five-year Treasury yields jumped 20 basis points this week to 1.26% as of 6:06 a.m. in New York, set for the biggest surge in two years, as traders consider the potential for the Fed to raise interest rates earlier than markets currently anticipate. Yields on similar-maturity debt by Italy led euro-area moves, climbing as much as five basis points before pulling back.
Global bonds have had a wild month, with yields gyrating as investors reassessed their expectations for the path of rate hikes as inflation quickens. The Treasury market has seen unusually large price swings as liquidity dried up, by one measure to the worst since peak investor pandemic fears in March 2020.
“Investors and Fed policy makers are still unsure as to whether elevated inflation will be transitory or not,” said Kenta Inoue, a senior market economist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities Ltd. in Tokyo. As such, “we’re likely to see bigger market volatility.”
Benchmark 10-year yields climbed three basis points to 1.58%, up from just 1.41% on Nov. 9. Earlier, the extra yield on 30-year bonds over five-year notes shrank two basis points to 64 basis points, the narrowest since March 2020.
Traders are awaiting University of Michigan survey results Friday that is expected to show consumer expectations of inflation in the coming year climbed to a fresh 13-year high. Overnight-indexed swaps suggest the Fed may raise rates as soon as July next year.
“Inflation is expected to remain elevated,” Naokazu Koshimizu, a senior rates strategist at Nomura Securities Co. in Tokyo, wrote in a note. “As such, expectations of earlier Fed rate hikes will continue to exert bear-flattening pressures” on the Treasury curve.
--With assistance from James Hirai.
This article was provided by Bloomberg News.