Treasury Auction Draws Highest Yield Since 2007 in Bond Selloff

(Bloomberg) -- The US government’s monthly auction of 10-year notes drew the highest yield since 2007 after the latest economic data suggested that the Federal Reserve is less likely to cut interest rates again before mid-year.

Most Read from Bloomberg

The $39 billion auction was awarded at 4.68%, slightly higher than indicated by its level at 1 p.m. New York time, the bidding deadline. Yields across maturities had risen by several basis points after gauges of service-sector activity and job openings came in stronger than expected.

The data “reinforced the market’s view on a strong US economy and rates are not restrictive,” said Tracy Chen, a portfolio manager at Brandywine Global Investment Management.

Traders, who as recently as late September were fully pricing in another Fed rate cut by March, scrapped wagers that there will be one until the second half of the year.

Ahead of December employment data on Friday, November JOLTS job openings unexpectedly increased while the December ISM services index rose more than anticipated. A related reading of prices paid by businesses jumped to the highest level since 2023.

“There’s still concern about elevated inflation risks that has created more of a term premium, there’s concern about these budget deficits needing to be financed, and there’s been a shift from last year that’s leading to more of a focus now on a soft landing — or no landing — as opposed to a hard landing,” said Michael Cloherty, head of US rates strategy at UBS Securities.

The existing 10-year note’s yield approached 4.70%, the highest level since May, while the 30-year bond’s exceeded 4.92% for the first time in more than a year. Two-year yields rose about 2 basis point Tuesday to 4.29%.

While the yield on 10-year notes hit as much as 5% in late 2023, the auction result was the highest for newly auctioned securities since August 2007. In the post-pandemic period, 10-year auctions in many cases drew yields below 1%. A 30-year bond auction on Wednesday stands to draw the highest yield since 2007 as well.

The 10-year yield has climbed from less than 4.2% a month ago amid signs of economic resilience and sticky inflation after three Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts last year, as well as projected growth in borrowing needs. It’s part of a global trend that drove UK 30-year yields to the highest level since 1998 on Tuesday.