Treasury Yields Slide to 2025 Low as Economic Red Flags Pile Up


(Bloomberg) — Treasury yields slid to their lowest levels of the year Tuesday as a recent parade of softening data suggesting the US economy will require Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts this year.

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Treasuries were trading near session highs late in New York, with the 10-year yield lower by more than 10 basis points around 4.29%, back at a mid-December level and well inside January’s peak of 4.8%.

Evidence that uncertainty over the Trump administration’s policies is weighing on households on Tuesday offered the latest driver for yields, which have slumped since mid-January. Traders are once again pricing in two quarter-point interest-rate cuts by the Fed this year.

“Red flags are emerging for the US economy,” said Elias Haddad, senior market strategist at Brown Brothers Harriman. “Another month or two of poor US economic data would deliver a blow to the US exceptionalism narrative.”

Data released Tuesday showed the Conference Board’s consumer confidence index fell more than expected to the lowest level since June. The report was merely the latest sign that the US economy is struggling with inflation and borrowing costs. A Citigroup Inc. index of US economic surprises last week declined to the lowest level since September, indicating that data isn’t measuring up to expectations.

Treasury yields declined to new session lows after the Conference Board data, with all benchmark tenors falling at least 10 basis points, and remained near those levels after an auction of five-year notes drew strong demand.

“The question is whether or not this growth scare is different” to last summer when most Treasury benchmarks fell below 4%, a move “that faded very quickly because you had so much fiscal stimulus taking place at the same time,” said Brij Khurana, portfolio manager at Wellington Management.

Now the fiscal picture looks less supportive for the economy. Economic anxiety has also been stoked by declines in US stocks since the S&P 500 reached record highs last week, with catalysts including a profit warning by Walmart Inc. Ongoing threats by US President Donald Trump to impose tariffs on imports from major trading partners and the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) efforts to slash federal payrolls are among other contributors.


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