Benchmark Treasury Yields Fall After Fed Releases Minutes
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Benchmark Treasury yields ticked down as the minutes of the last Federal Reserve meeting surfaced, which suggest that come September, the central bank will most likely raise rates for a third time this year. The benchmark 10-year yield went slightly lower to 2.821 and the 30-year benchmark was down to 2.975.
Short-term maturities ticked higher with the 2-year yield rising to 2.608 and the 5-year to 2.712. During its last interest rate policy decision in June, the Fed raised the federal funds rate 25 basis points to its current level of 2.
Fed officials stated that if the incoming economic data supports its views, “it would likely soon be appropriate to take another step in removing policy accommodation,” according to the minutes. Per MarketWatch, current market odds are showing a 96% probability of a rate hike in September and 60% chance of another in December.
Despite the majority expecting rates to rise, trade concerns could give the Fed enough pause to warrant keeping rates unchanged. That worry appears to have dwindled as the United States and China are reengaging talks to hash out the trade differences between the two economic superpowers.
“I was thinking that in the minutes there would be more concern about protectionism, which would have been a fairly dovish signal. We did see those comments and they could be read as mildly dovish, in the same way that people reacted to the European Central Bank’s concentration on worries about protectionism,” said John Vail, chief global strategist at Nikko Asset Management.
Source: tradingeconomics.com
Investment-Grade Corporate Bond ETFs Rise
Investment-grade corporate bond ETFs gained like the iShares iBoxx $ Invmt Grade Corp Bd ETF (LQD) and iShares Interest Rate Hedged Corp Bd ETF (LQDH) . LQD gained .06% while LQDH rose 0.05%.
LQD seeks to track the investment results of the Markit iBoxx® USD Liquid Investment Grade Index composed of U.S. dollar-denominated, investment-grade corporate bonds. LQD allocates 95 percent of its total assets in investment-grade corporate bonds to mitigate credit risk.
LQDH seeks to mitigate the interest rate risk of a portfolio composed of U.S. dollar-denominated, investment-grade corporate bonds without being tied to an underlying index. LQD is actively-managed and seeks to invest in one or more underlying funds that principally invest in investment-grade bonds, and in U.S. Treasury securities (or cash equivalents).
For more trends in fixed income, visit the Rising Rates Channel.
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