The 10-Year Treasury Yield Dips To Lowest Level This Year

 | Aug 30, 2017 09:30AM ET

Demand for safe-haven Treasuries kicked into high gear yesterday, which cut the benchmark 10-Year Treasury yield down to its lowest level in nearly ten months. What’s driving this key rate down? A combination of factors, ranging from renewed market jitters over the latest missile test by North Korea to concerns that Hurricane Harvey will take a toll on US economic growth to a weak run of inflation in 2017.

A new survey of economists advises that the storm will reduce GDP growth in the third quarter by 0.2 percentage point, according to the median projection. “Rebuilding would then give growth a bump in the fourth quarter by the same amount, they estimated,” Bloomberg reports. “A broader survey prior to the storm estimated a growth pace of 2.5 percent for the third quarter and 2.4 percent from October through December.” The main takeaway: GDP growth in the near future is expected to remain just below the 2.6% pace in Q2.

At one point yesterday the 10-year rate fell below 2.10% before rebounding intraday to end the session at roughly 2.13% on Wednesday (Aug. 29), based on daily data via Treasury.gov. Nonetheless, the downside bias in the benchmark rate remains intact. The jump in the 10-year yield that followed Donald Trump’s election last November — a rise triggered by expectations that economic growth would accelerate under the new administration — is just a few basis points away from completely reversing.