Extracto:The 10-year Treasury yield was flat on Friday as investors weighed the slate of trade developments and economic data in the past week.
The 10-year Treasury yield was flat on Friday as investors weighed the slate of trade developments and economic data in the past week.
At 4:12 a.m. ET, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury was less than one basis point higher at 4.414%. The 2-year yield was also little changed at 3.925%, as was the 30-year yield, at 4.954%.
After announcing a trade framework with Japan, U.S. President Donald Trump is now turning his attention to negotiations with the European Union. Optimism that a trade deal between the two sides rose when Washington signed a “massive Deal” with Japan, and Trump subsequently told dinner guests on Tuesday that “we have Europe coming in tomorrow, and the next day.”
However, while upcoming trade deals may slightly lower the newly announced reciprocal tariffs, companies are likely to pass those costs on to consumers, and consequently weigh on a “key source of U.S. growth,” Eastspring Investments wrote in a note.
“A slowdown in U.S. consumption would negatively impact global exporters, and hence, weigh on overall global growth,” the investment firm's analysts said, adding that they expect U.S. gross domestic product growth to slow to around 1.6% year over year by the end of 2025.
U.S. Treasurys also “struggled” thanks to a strong batch of recent data from the U.S., Deutsche Bank economists wrote in a daily note, citing weekly initial jobless claims that fell for a sixth consecutive week, as well as better-than-expected flash purchasing managers' index numbers, with the composite reading for the U.S. up to a seven-month high of 54.6, above the 52.8 expected.
Descargo de responsabilidad:
Las opiniones de este artículo solo representan las opiniones personales del autor y no constituyen un consejo de inversión para esta plataforma. Esta plataforma no garantiza la precisión, integridad y actualidad de la información del artículo, ni es responsable de ninguna pérdida causada por el uso o la confianza en la información del artículo.