U.S. 2-Year Treasury Yield Rises To New 4-Year High

 | Sep 16, 2015 06:47AM ET

The Treasury market’s 2-Year yield yesterday (September 15) broke the ceiling, rising nine basis points to a new four-year high of 0.82%, based on Treasury.gov’s daily data. After repeatedly testing but never breaking above the low-0.70% range this year, this key yield—reportedly the most sensitive spot on the curve for rate expectations—pushed above the old barrier on Tuesday. The timing of the increase–ahead of tomorrow’s policy announcement from the Federal Reserve–looks like a decisive bet that the central bank will begin raising rates when it issues a public statement on Thursday.

The benchmark 10-Year yield also rose yesterday (black line in chart below), gaining ten basis points to 2.28%, the highest in more than a month. But in contrast with the 2-year yield (red line), the 10-year Note’s current yield remains well below its peak of recent years—roughly 3.0% in early 2014.