Unlock stock picks and a broker-level newsfeed that powers Wall Street.
US 10-Year Yield Drops Below 4% for First Time Since Trump Won

In This Article:

(Bloomberg) -- The yield on benchmark Treasuries fell briefly below 4% for the first time since October as Wall Street fretted that the US economy will end up worse off from President Donald Trump’s trade war.

Most Read from Bloomberg

Ten-year yields declined as much as 13 basis points on Thursday to dip below 4%, the lowest level since before Trump was elected last year. Meanwhile, money markets priced in a 50% chance of the Fed delivering four quarter-point rate reductions this year, a scenario that wasn’t even contemplated on Wednesday.

Concern that the steepest increase in American tariffs in a century will hammer economic growth is driving a fierce rally in global bond markets, with yields on European and UK bonds also plunging. Similarly, traders ramped up wagers on monetary easing from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England, increasing the chances that both deliver three more cuts this year.

Listen to the Here’s Why podcast on Apple, Spotify or anywhere you listen

“The bond market is a big winner,” said Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB. “Central banks are likely to step up to ease some of the pain from the US’s new global trade policy.”

Trump’s tariff plan on Wednesday came much harder than expected, as he announced a minimum 10% levy on all exporters to the US and slapped additional duties on nations with big trade imbalances. The move escalated global trade tensions and sent investors rushing for safe havens.

The response in bond markets was sharp. European and US yields tanked across the board as investors spurned riskier assets. Ten-year yields plunged below 4% on Thursday before edging back to 4.03%. Two-year yields were down about 15 basis points to 3.7%.

Even the dollar, which has seen debate swirl over its status as a haven in times of uncertainty, was down some 1.5% as of 2 p.m. New York time.

“The odds of recession are increasing given the timing of tariffs and tax policy. Meanwhile, monetary and fiscal policy are both restrictive — as are lower equity prices,” said Jack McIntyre, portfolio manager at Brandywine Global Investment Management. “The bond market is keying off of the negative growth impact more than any inflation concern from the new tariff regime.”

Traders priced in about 90 basis points of easing by the Fed by the end of the year, implying at least three quarter-point rate reductions this year — and a fair chance of a fourth.