
(Bloomberg) — Bond investors are driving a wedge into the Treasury market in anticipation of slower economic growth and faster inflation, spurring demand for shorter-term Treasuries at ever-lower yields while longer-term yields drift higher. The next test comes with Friday data expected to show inflation remains elevated.
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Five-year yields fell eight basis points last week, breaching 4% after Federal Reserve policymakers lowered their forecasts for US economic growth, bolstering wagers on interest-rate cuts this year. As 30-year bond yields climbed on Friday, they exceeded five-year yields by nearly 60 basis points, the widest margin since September.
A highlight of this week’s busy economic data calendar is personal income and spending data for February, on Friday. The report includes the inflation gauge the Fed aims to have average 2% over the long run. It was 2.5% in January and economists expect it to remain there, while the core rate excluding food and energy is seen accelerating to 2.7% from 2.6%.
This week also brings the last Treasury coupon auctions of the month — a combined $183 billion of new two-, five- and seven-year notes.
What to Watch
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Economic data:
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March 24: Chicago Fed national activity index; S&P Global US manufacturing and services PMIs
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March 25: Philadelphia Fed non-manufacturing activity; S&P CoreLogic home prices; new home sales; Conference Board consumer confidence survey; Richmond Fed manufacturing & business conditions
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March 26: MBA mortgage applications; durable goods orders
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March 27: 4Q GDP (final revision); wholesale and retail inventories; advanced trade balance; initial and continuing jobless claims; pending home sales; Kansas City Fed manufacturing activity
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March 28: Personal income and spending; Kansas City Fed services activity
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Fed calendar:
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March 24: Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic; Fed Vice Chair Michael Barr
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March 25: Fed Governor Adriana Kugler; New York Fed President John Williams
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March 26: Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari; St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem
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March 27: Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin
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March 28: Barr; Bostic
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Auction calendar:
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March 24: 13- and 26-week bills
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March 25: 6-week bills; two-year notes
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March 26: 17-week bills; two-year floating-rate notes; five-year notes
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March 27: 4- and 8-week bills; seven-year notes
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