10-year Treasury yield back above 4.6% after mixed jobless claims data


Treasury yields were slightly higher early Friday after a mixed set of data on weekly jobless claims.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury was 3 basis points higher at 4.607%, slightly down from its peak earlier in the week but back above the 4.6% level it had not breached since May. The 2-year Treasury was fractionally higher at 4.334%.

One basis point is equal to 0.01%. Yields move inversely to prices.

After the Christmas break, jobless claims data released Thursday for the week ending Dec. 21 came in 1,000 lower at 219,000, below the 225,000 consensus forecast from Dow Jones.

However, continuing claims rose by 46,000 for the week ending Dec. 14 to the highest level since November 2021.

The 10-year Treasury yield has risen more than 40 basis points in December as traders anticipate a more hawkish Federal Reserve in 2025. The central bank next meets at the end of January, when a rate hold is expected.

Monthly data on wholesale inventories is due Friday.



View Original Source Here

You May Also Like
New funds target weight loss, Big Tech hype: Roundhill Investments

New funds target weight loss, Big Tech hype: Roundhill Investments

A major exchange-traded fund provider is going deep on two popular plays:…

MLB Hall of Fame catcher Johnny Bench on sticky baseball controversy: ‘A little pine tar never hurt’

Hall of Fame catcher Johnny Bench told CNBC that the headlines about…

Stitch Fix shares skyrocket more than 30% on earnings beat, upbeat outlook

Katrina Lake, founder and chief executive officer of Stitch Fix Inc. Patrick…

Uber rival Ola offers London drivers electric vehicle incentives as it fights to regain license

Ola cab drivers talk with each other as they wait for passengers…