Treasury yields fall as investors mull over key economic data

April 28, 2023

NEW YORK (April 28) U.S. Treasury yields declined on Friday as investors digested the latest gross domestic product figures and awaited the release of key data that could impact the Federal Reserve’s upcoming policy decision.  

As of 5:57 a.m. ET, the 10-year Treasury was at 3.473% after falling by over 5 basis points. The yield on the 2-year Treasury was last down by 6 basis points to 4.037%.

Yields and prices move in opposite directions and one basis point is equivalent to 0.01%.

TREASURYS

TICKER COMPANY YIELD CHANGE %CHANGE 

US1M

U.S. 1 Month Treasury4.202-0.1280

US3M

U.S. 3 Month Treasury5.172-0.0230

US6M

U.S. 6 Month Treasury5.031-0.0260

US1Y

U.S. 1 Year Treasury4.762-0.0370

US2Y

U.S. 2 Year Treasury4.05-0.0470

US10Y

U.S. 10 Year Treasury3.473-0.0550

US30Y

U.S. 30 Year Treasury3.706-0.050

 

Treasury yields had jumped on Thursday, with the 2-year Treasury gaining over 15 basis points, despite the latest GDP figures indicating slower than expected economic growth in the first quarter.

Thursday’s report showed that the GDP rose by 1.1% at an annualized pace, falling short of the 2% increase previously expected by economists surveyed by Dow Jones.

Meanwhile, the personal consumption expenditure index, which is one of the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauges, came in at 4.2% on a quarterly basis. This was above the 3.7% for the previous quarter.

The monthly reading of the core PCE for March is expected to be released Friday. Economists are expecting it to have risen by 0.3% according to Dow Jones, which would be in line with February’s increase.

Monthly personal income and spending figures are also due Friday. Investors will be watching the data closely as it could impact the Fed’s next policy moves.

The central bank is set to meet next week and is expected to hike interest rates by a further 25 basis points. Investors are also hoping for guidance about how long rates will remain elevated and when rate cuts can potentially be expected.

Elsewhere, Germany’s GDP stagnated in the first quarter, falling short of expectations, and France reported 0.2% GDP growth on Friday.

CNBC

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