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This Article is From Feb 06, 2024

Treasuries Post Loss In All But One Day This Year

Treasuries Post Loss In All But One Day This Year
The U.S. Treasury building in Washington, D.C., U.S.
STOCKS IN THIS STORY
Goenka Business & Finance Ltd.
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Nifty Capital Markets
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USD-INR
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MSCI World
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SAB Events & Governance Now Media Ltd.
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Nifty BHARAT Bond Index - April 2033
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For all the excitement around the Federal Reserve's big pivot, the Treasuries market has had a rough 2024 thus far. 

The Bloomberg Treasury Total Return Index has been below the year-end level on all but one day since the start of the year. It has declined about 0.7% this year through Friday, reversing some of its 7% rally in the final two months of 2023. 

Granted, the loss isn't that unusual — in 2021, the benchmark never logged a positive year-to-date return for the whole year. But the sluggish performance does show that enthusiasm among bond traders late last year amid cooling inflation was premature. Now, data showing a resilient economy has prompted traders tap the breaks on the timing and the magnitude of Fed rate cuts.

Yields on 10-year notes jumped 28 basis points since Friday, the most since June 2022, after stronger-than-expected data and a service-sector survey that reinforced the Fed's message that interest-rate cuts are unlikely to begin before May. In the futures market, there has been heavy liquidation of long positions in five- and 10-year contracts, as pricing of a March rate cut faded fast.

“The structural-pain trade is higher rates,” said Gregory Faranello, head of US rates trading and strategy for AmeriVet Securities. “We are prepared for lower rates. But the rates continue to move higher, which will probably get people a little bit stirred up, a little bit nervous.” 

Just four weeks ago, a March rate cut was considered a near certainty by investors. Now the chance of a quarter-point cut in March has dwindled to almost 10%.

For the year, traders are expecting about 116 basis points of rate cuts, or a little less than five quarter-point reductions. In comparison, the market had priced in six cuts in mid-January, twice as many as the median forecast by Fed officials at the December policy meeting.  

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

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