Treasury Investors Keep Focus On Fed As They Shrug Off Inflation Concerns

 | Jul 06, 2021 18:27

Investors in U.S. Treasuries are shrugging off inflation worries and keeping yields well-contained. They seem to accept the argument from Federal Reserve policymakers that the recent increase in inflation will be transitory.

Break-even inflation rates, derived from the yield difference between conventional and inflation-indexed Treasuries, peaked in May and have declined since then. The two-year break-even rate was the highest at the peak, nearing 3%, followed by the five-year break-even and the 10-year, which barely crested 2.5%.

However, the dot-plot graphs and median forecasts released with the mid-June meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee surprised investors as a majority of FOMC members penciled in two interest-rate increases by end-2023 after previously forecasting the first increase for 2024.

h2 Cold Feet On Hot Inflation?/h2

As one analyst suggested, Fed policymakers may be getting cold feet about letting inflation run hot for an extended length of time, however flexible they say they want to be.

This could help explain the conundrum of the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury declining on Friday when the June jobs report showed a stronger-than-expected 850,000 new jobs.