Bond Report: Treasury yields mixed after busy week for central banks

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Treasurys were putting in a mixed performance early Friday, with long-dated yields edging lower and short-end rates pushing higher, as a week packed with moves by major central banks draws to a close.

What are yields doing?
  • The 10-year Treasury note
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    1.390%

    yielded 1.415%, down from 1.422% at 3 p.m. Eastern on Thursday.

  • The 2-year Treasury yield
    TMUBMUSD02Y,
    0.605%

    rose to 0.625%, compared with 0.619% Thursday afternoon.

  • The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond
    TMUBMUSD30Y,
    1.824%

    fell to 1.842%, down from 1.86%.

What’s driving the market?

The Bank of Japan on Friday said it would next year begin unwinding some of the emergency stimulus measures put in place due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but stuck with its ultra-easy stance on monetary policy. “I don’t think the BOJ will move toward normalizing monetary policy like in the U.S. and Europe,” said BOJ Gov. Haruhiko Kuroda.

The European Central Bank on Thursday affirmed it would end its emergency program of asset purchases in March, while temporarily boosting the size of a longer-running asset-buying program beginning in the second quarter of next year. The Bank of England, meanwhile, became the first major central bank to raise interest rates, unexpectedly lifting its benchmark by 15 basis points to 0.25%.

And the Federal Reserve on Wednesday announced it would significantly speed the wind-down of its asset purchases, ending them in March and penciling in three rate increases in 2022.

Treasury yields fell Thursday, a move that was seen as counterintuitive given that major central banks were seen becoming less accommodative. The moves were seen in part reflecting worries that central banks may be tightening into a weaker global economic environment, enhanced by uncertainty over the implications of the spread of the omicron variant of the coronavirus that causes COVID-19.

No major U.S. economic data are due on Friday, but investors will hear from Fed Gov. Christopher Waller, who is scheduled to talk about the economic outlook at 1 p.m. Eastern,

What are analysts saying?

“The stage is set for an extension of the tale of two markets; the front end beholden to U.S. fundamentals as 10s and 30s are driven by global macro,” said Ian Lyngen and Ben Jeffery, strategists at BMO Capital Markets, in a note. “The depths to which the yield curve can flatten will be a function of the Fed’s willingness to move forward with rate normalization in the event the global outlook dims further.”