Newsletter Subscribe
Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter
Enter your email address below and subscribe to our newsletter

U.S. Treasury prices rose on Tuesday as a sweeping global equity selloff and falling oil prices drove investors toward the safety of government bonds, tempering expectations for aggressive Federal Reserve tightening. Meanwhile, euro zone government bond yields continued to drift lower after ECB President Christine Lagarde told the European Parliament there was no evidence of inflation dynamics warranting a more forceful policy response.
A brutal selloff in technology stocks rippled across global markets on Tuesday, with the Nasdaq Composite falling more than 1.5 percent and South Korea’s Kospi plunging 10 percent from its record high as investors dumped semiconductor heavyweights. The S&P 500 opened sharply lower, down roughly 1.5 percent in early trading.wsj
The risk-off mood pushed investors into Treasuries. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note fell more than 2 basis points, while the 2-year yield dropped over 4 basis points. Crude oil prices also weighed on inflation expectations, with Brent crude declining around 1.2 percent and West Texas Intermediate falling 1.6 percent after the United States waived sanctions on Iran for 60 days as peace talks in Switzerland showed progress.cnbc
Euro zone bond yields edged lower on Tuesday, extending gains from a rally late Monday triggered by Lagarde’s remarks to a European Parliament committee. The ECB president said the central bank’s June rate hike of 25 basis points was appropriate but added that “we have yet to observe any signs of inflation expectations becoming unanchored or secondary effects that would justify a more aggressive policy response at this time”.econostream-media
German 2-year Schatz yields fell nearly 5 basis points on Monday to 2.595 percent and slipped further on Tuesday morning to 2.578 percent. The gap with U.S. 2-year Treasury yields, which rose to 4.236 percent on Monday, widened to around 164 basis points. Money markets trimmed pricing for ECB tightening by year-end in response to Lagarde’s dovish tone.economictimes
The contrasting moves highlighted the divergence between the Federal Reserve and the ECB. While concerns about Kevin Warsh’s Fed keeping rates elevated rattled equity markets, Jefferies strategist Mohit Kumar said the ECB may be done raising rates. “That has been our view since the last ECB meeting that the ECB would not need to hike anymore in this business cycle,” Kumar said. Benchmark 10-year Bund yields fell 2 basis points to 2.934 percent on Tuesday, even as ECB chief economist Philip Lane cautioned that euro zone inflation could remain elevated despite easing geopolitical tensions.reuters