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US Bonds Dip on Tax Cuts While Bets Build on Tariff-Driven Rally

(Bloomberg) -- Treasuries fell slightly on Wednesday amid talks about US tax cuts, even as bond traders start to hedge for a possible economic slowdown by placing wagers on a big market rally taking hold soon.

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Yields rose one to two basis points across the curve on Wednesday after House Republicans passed a budget blueprint calling for deep tax cuts which may grow the US deficit by $3 trillion over ten years. The 10-year rate traded at 4.31%.

Still, US yields are very close to the year-to-date lows reached on Tuesday after a rally in Treasuries that brought the 10-year rate down from 4.57% a week ago. Option traders are shifting their positions as the US economy, which is already showing signs of weakness, faces more pressure under Donald Trump’s tariffs.

There’s “a risk-off tone as worries continue to mount regarding the impact of President Trump’s agenda on the performance of the global economy,” Ian Lyngen, the head of US rates strategy at BMO Capital Markets, said in a note.

US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent fueled the bullish wagers Tuesday — a day after Trump confirmed that tariffs on Canada and Mexico are set to go into effect next week — by saying during an event in Washington, that 10-year yields should “naturally” drop with Trump’s policy.

One standout position targeting a 10-year yield drop to 4.15% and beyond emerged Tuesday morning. Around $60 million was spent on the bet, which stands to garner profits of approximately $40 million should yields drop as low as 4%, according to calculations by Bloomberg. If yields re-test the September lows, the position stands to amass a fortune of roughly $280 million.

Derivatives traders are also targeting yields on shorter-dated notes. Over the past few sessions there has been a growing long position amassed in fed funds futures, which stands to benefit from a Federal Reserve interest-rate cut as early as the May 7 policy meeting. Open interest, or the amount of futures positions held in the May contract, has risen by over 50% since the start of last week as traders price in more central bank easing over the course of this year.

Fed swaps are now pricing in around 21% probability for a May rate cut versus just an 8% chance a week ago. Up until this week, a narrow range of Fed policy outcomes have kept yields in a tight range.