U.S. Treasury Yields Close at Highest Levels in Over Two Months Following Release of New Economic Data

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Key Takeaways:

What drove markets

Data released on Thursday showed that weekly initial jobless-benefit claims fell to a five-week low of 201,000 in mid-February, signaling that the labor market remains strong. In addition, a pair of S&P Global business surveys found that the economy expanded at an above-average rate in February. Wall Street is bracing for more strong U.S. economic and inflation data next week.

Meanwhile, Treasury’s $9 billion auction of 30-year Treasury inflation-protected securities, or TIPS, came in rather strong on Thursday, according to Tom di Galoma, co-head of global rates trading for BTIG in New York. The results were in line with the performance that new 30-year TIPS auctions tend to have had, on average, since 2015, he said via phone.

In remarks made on Thursday, Federal Reserve Vice Chair Philip Jefferson, the No. 2 official at the central bank, said that he thinks officials can begin to cut interest rates in 2024. Separately, Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker said a near-term rate cut is unlikely.

Analysts Sayings
“Concerns over the persistence of price pressures reignited by the last CPI [consumer-price index] report and the robust labor market (as evidenced by the latest NFP [nonfarm payrolls] as well as today’s initial jobless-claims data) suggest policymakers will not rush with cutting rates, in our view. Our June call holds,” remarked Roman Ziruk, a senior market analyst at global financial-services firm Ebury.

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