Treasury yields are sliding
Retail sales fell for a second straight month and core consumer prices posted their first drop since 2010, pushing longer dated yields to their lowest levels since the week after President Donald Trump's election victory.
Here's a look at the scoreboard as of 7:20 a.m. ET:
- 2-year -2bps @ 1.185%
- 3-year -2.7bps @ 1.385%
- 5-year -3.1bps @ 1.738%
- 7-year -2.7bps @ 2.018%
- 10-year -2.3bps @ 2.214%
- 30-year -1bp @ 2.882%
Longer dated Treasury yields rallied sharply in the weeks following the election amid speculation Trump's proposed policies would bring back inflation to the US. However, Trump has been unable to get his healthcare plan out of the GOP-controlled House, and that has called into question his ability to deliver on his promises of cutting taxes and rolling back regulations.
Hard data has disappointed as of late, and that has pushed back expectations of a Fed rate hike. Currently, World Interest Rate Probability data provided by Bloomberg shows just a 47% chance the Fed hikes in June. That's down from 66.5% one week ago.
Investing.com