Safety-minded investors drive yields lower

  • The benchmark 10-year yield was down 4.3 basis points at 0.9261% in afternoon trading, flattening a key part of the yield curve.
  • "This market is seeing volatility as people wrestle with this concept of having a vaccine and too-early reopenings" at the same time,
08 Dec, 2020

US Treasury yields fell on Monday as rising coronavirus caseloads and new public health restrictions drove investors to buy the safe securities.

The benchmark 10-year yield was down 4.3 basis points at 0.9261% in afternoon trading, flattening a key part of the yield curve.

On Friday the yield on the note reached 0.986%, its highest level since March and close to the 1% threshold, on optimism that a poor jobs report would drive Washington to pass a new round of economic stimulus.

Monday's reversal showed the questions investors still face during a period when vaccines seem ready to end the pandemic but on an uncertain timeline while health statistics deteriorate, said Jason Pride, chief investment officer for private wealth at Glenmede.

"This market is seeing volatility as people wrestle with this concept of having a vaccine and too-early reopenings" at the same time, he said.

While the tech-heavy Nasdaq surged to an all-time high on Monday, the blue-chip Dow and the broad S&P 500 were both lower in afternoon trading.

Kim Rupert, senior economist for Action Economics, said the higher demand for Treasuries on Monday seemed to reflect a buying opportunity for some investors and called the trading pattern "a corrective move."

President-elect Joe Biden said he will nominate California Attorney General Xavier Becerra for secretary of health and human services on Monday as one of the top officials on his team to fight the pandemic. The US daily death toll has exceeded 2,000 in recent days as officials prepare for a mammoth vaccination effort.

Authorities in California on Monday compelled much of the most populous state to close shop and stay at home the day after it reported a record 30,000-plus new coronavirus cases.

A closely watched part of the US Treasury yield curve measuring the gap between yields on two- and 10-year Treasury notes, seen as an indicator of economic expectations, was at 78 basis points, about 4 basis points lower than Friday's close. At one point on Friday it reached 82.5 basis points, its highest since February 2018.

The two-year US Treasury yield, which typically moves in step with interest rate expectations, was down almost a basis point at 0.1448% in afternoon trading.

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