10-year Treasury yield hits 2-week high

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange on 11 August 2025.
Nyse
After the first time the Federal Reserve reduced interest rates this year on Wednesday, investors increased on Friday as investors weighed the status of the US economy and future monetary policy.
The 10 -year Treasury grade return reached 4,127%of more than 2 points. The 2 -year Treasury return added 1 basis points up to 3,572%. Both yield was the highest in two weeks since September 5th.
The 30 -year Treasury bond return added 2.5 basis points to 4.745%.
A basic point is equal to 0.01%and the yields and prices move in opposite directions.
The longer backup in US Treasury returns is unreasonable to the background of short -term rates. However, long -term debt investors host the expectations of economic growth, inflation and government financing, including how much we have to sell not only for future short -term rates, but also to finance existing expenditures and pass over the existing debt.
“The US Treasury’s 10 -year return is not lower for the second flat day after the Fed deduction, but not lower, but increasing GDP forecasts and inflation,” Wells Fargo Investment Institute Senior Global Market Strategist Scott Wren. He said.
This week, the federal reserve reduced the comparison loan ratio rate of quarter percentage points between 4.00-4.25%. FED President Jerome Powell described this movement as “risk management”, and the policy makers said that two deductions were probable in late October this year and at the beginning of December.
Less unemployed allegations published in a weekly report about the calmed investor on Thursday, after an increase in the allegations last week, concerns about a US economy in the labor market and recent concerns about crack symptoms.
No economic data to be released on Friday, but next week, investors will look at the August Personal Consumption Expenditure Index, an inflation indicator of the FED for more information on price prints and the impact of tariffs on the US economy.

