Monday’s flight-to-safety trade into U.S. government debt temporarily sent the 10-year Treasury yield below an important technical level and shattered the previous sense of calm that many investors and traders had about the threat of U.
Treasury yields took a round trip this week, rising from Monday through Thursday but giving it all back today, as investors dumped stocks and flocked to safer assets. The yield on the 10-year Treasury note settled at 4.
The market watchers surveyed by Bankrate expect the 10-year yield to be 4.08 percent at the end of the first quarter of 2026 — down from 4.25 percent when the survey closed. For context, respondents in Bankrate’s fourth-quarter survey expected the 10-year yield to be 4.14 percent at the end of 2025.
Treasury yields are both currently below their 200-day moving averages, "reinforcing the technical backing for a continuation of the rally" that's unfolding in U.S. government debt, said BMO Capital Markets strategists Ian Lyngen and Vail Hartman.
Tariff shock drove yields to new 2025 lows, back to October levels, as investors sought save havens amid recession fears and uncertainty about how trade wars will impact the global economy.
U.S. Treasury yields moved lower on Friday morning, as President Trump’s tariffs regime and the broader state of the economy remain in focus.
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Bond yields are plummeting on the tariff news. The U.S. 10-year Treasury note now yields just 4.06%. It was only a few months ago that investors were worried about stubborn inflation pressures potenti
The 10-year yield declined 0.089 percentage point to 4.156% today. The price rose 23/32 to 103 24/32. --Yield is down for three consecutive trading days --Yield is down 0.213 percentage point over ...
The 10-year yield declined 0.009 percentage point to 4.245% today. The price rose 2/32 to 103 1/32. --Yield is down for two consecutive trading days --Yield is down 0.125 percentage point over the ...