Two-year Treasury yield dips below 2.4 percent

05 Jan, 2019

The US two-year Treasury note yield dropped below 2.4 percent on Thursday, reaching parity with the federal funds effective rate for the first time since 2008.
The fed funds effective rate, which was 2.4 percent on Thursday, moves within the Federal Reserve's key policy range of 2.25 to 2.5 percent. The market move suggests investors believe the US central bank will not be able to continue to tighten monetary policy as its forecast suggests, after having lifted benchmark interest rates four times in 2018.
"This is a big deal," said Ian Lyngen, head of US rates strategy at BMO Capital Markets. "The market is effectively saying that at some point in the next 24 months, the Fed is going to have to not only stop hiking, but actively start easing."
In late afternoon trade, the three- and five-year note yields had also dropped below 2.4 percent.
Treasury yields fell on Thursday after data showed a significant drop in US manufacturing activity, extending overnight losses prompted by a revenue warning issued by Apple
that sent investors fleeing to safe-haven instruments.
A report from the Institute of Supply Management showed that US factory activity slowed more than expected in December. The ISM index fell to 54.1 from 59.3 in November, the biggest drop since October 2008.
The two-year Treasury yield fell to its lowest since May 30 and was last at 2.38 percent. The two-year yield rises with investors' expectations of rate hikes.
Interest rate futures also soared, another signal that investors and traders see the Fed's three-year campaign of slow-paced rate hikes at an end.
The January 2020 fed fund futures contract jumped 17 basis points in price, the second-biggest daily gain since the contract started trading two years ago. That means investors expect the Fed's rate to be around 2.2 percent at this time next year versus the current effective rate of 2.40 percent.
The benchmark 10-year government note yield fell to a session low of 2.55 percent, a more than 50 percent retracement from its 2018 high. It is down 9.5 basis points, falling below 2.6 percent for the first time since January 2018.
Weakening iPhone sales in China prompted Apple on Wednesday to cut its quarterly sales forecast. Investors pulled out of equity markets following the announcement, which suggested the economic slowdown in China may be worse than expected and cast a shadow over the outlook for corporate profit growth this year.
China's economy was already a focus of concern after a measure of its manufacturing activity shrank for the first time in 19 months in December, hit by the Chinese-US trade war, with the weakness spilling over to other Asian economies.
On Friday morning the government will issue its December employment report, which will be examined closely for signs of any slowdown in hiring in the US economy.

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