Yields decline as global equity rout sparks safety buying

Reuters

Published Nov 20, 2018 03:01PM ET

Yields decline as global equity rout sparks safety buying

By Karen Brettell

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Benchmark U.S. Treasury yields fell to seven-week lows on Tuesday as global stock market declines boosted demand for safe haven debt, before giving up some price gains as investors closed positions before Thursday's Thanksgiving holiday.

Stocks were hurt by worries over softening demand for Apple Inc's (O:AAPL) iPhone and corporate growth prospects, while oil prices sank on concerns about rising global supply.

“The near-term guidance Treasuries are taking are from broader risk assets, so they are certainly paying attention to the fall in equities globally,” said Jon Hill, U.S. rates strategist at BMO Capital Markets in New York.

Benchmark 10-year notes (US10YT=RR) fell to 3.036 percent, the lowest since Sept. 28, before rising back to 3.052 percent.

Analysts attributed the rise off the yield lows to investors closing trades with liquidity expected to decline before Thursday's Thanksgiving holiday.

The 10-year yields have declined from 3.25 percent on Nov. 7 and are at the low end of the range they have traded in since the beginning of October.

The bond market will be closed on Thursday and will close early on Friday.

Fears about slowing global growth have also boosted demand for U.S. government bonds as investors contemplate how a slowdown will impact further rate increases by the U.S. central bank.

“The background for a lot of what’s going on is a reassessment of the Fed’s path of policy as it relates to the growing concern about global growth as well as a potential recession going into 2020 and 2021,” Hill said.

Two-year note yields (US2YT=RR), which are highly sensitive to interest rates, have fallen to 2.791 percent from 2.977 percent on Nov. 8, and are trading near their lowest levels since Sept. 18.

Richard Clarida, the Fed's newly appointed vice chair, on Friday noted there was “some evidence of global slowing,” adding “that's something that is going to be relevant as I think about the outlook for the U.S. economy."

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell said last Wednesday that softness in housing and high levels of corporate debt had caught the Federal Reserve's eye, even as a "really strong" U.S. economy was likely to continue growing.