Investors look to fresh economic data

The 10-year Treasury yield inched lower Wednesday after briefly topping the 4% mark as investors bet that perhaps the Federal Reserve wouldn’t cut rates as aggressively as hoped for this year.

The 10-year Treasury yield was last down about a basis points to 3.932, after touching above the key 4% mark earlier in the morning. The 2-year Treasury yield was last trading at 4.362% after rising by three basis points. Yields and prices have an inverted relationship and one basis point equals 0.01%.

The 10-year Treasury yield was in a steep downtrend to end 2023 since spooking investors by rising above 5% in October. The 10-year yield closed out last year at around 3.83%. The downturn helped fuel a year-end rally in stocks.

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10-year Treasury yield, 6 months

But that has reversed this year with investors questioning whether the market is getting too optimistic about how aggressively the Fed may cut rates this year. The Fed changed its hawkish tune mid-December, forecasting three rate cuts in 2024. Traders began betting the Fed would be even more aggressive than that and also move to lower rates pretty soon into the new year.

Richmond Federal Reserve President Thomas Barkin on Wednesday noted that interest rate hikes were still “on the table” even though the Fed is making “real progress” on inflation.

Minutes from that Fed’s December meeting released Tuesday showed that the progress on the inflation front has satisfied central bank officials, and that many expects cuts at some point in 2024. However, the Fed intends to maintain a restrictive stance in the short-term as some uncertainties linger.

“Participants generally stressed the importance of maintaining a careful and data-dependent approach to making monetary policy decisions and reaffirmed that it would be appropriate for policy to remain at a restrictive stance for some time until inflation was clearly moving down sustainably toward the Committee’s objective,” the minutes stated.

According to CME Group’s FedWatch tool, markets are currently pricing in an over 64% chance of the first rate cut taking place in March.

Other economic reports released Wednesday offered greater clues into the state of the economy and the labor market. November’s JOLTS report came about in line with expectations at 8.79 million employment listings, while December’s ISM Manufacturing report, also released on Wednesday, registered a 47.4 reading. This was higher than both consensus estimates and the previous month’s level, indicating expanding demand.

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