US | Do lower yields signal that the Fed might shift its focus back to growth risks?
Published on Thursday, February 27, 2025
US | Do lower yields signal that the Fed might shift its focus back to growth risks?
Summary
A recent string of weak data together with the postponement of tariffs and a less worrisome fiscal bill than feared likely eased market participants’ bets of a scenario in which the Fed keeps interest rates at their current level for the whole year.
Key points
- Key points:
- The 2-year Treasury yield is down 30 bps from the high it reached a week before Trump’s inauguration; the 10-year yield has fallen by c. 30 bps so far this month.
- They have come down in spite of high uncertainty; PCE inflation due out this Friday could either reverse or reinforce this trend if it surprises market expectations.
- Bond market volatility measures suggest that investors have continued to respond to incoming data without signs of panic despite the continued uncertainty.
- Market-implied 5-year inflation expectations are echoing recent survey-based evidence that has shown that US consumers are increasingly concerned about short-term inflation.
- Within this context of mixed signals, the futures market implied odds of no rate cuts this year dropped from 30% in early February to less than 10% in the last few days.
Geographies
- Geography Tags
- US
Topics
- Topic Tags
- Central Banks
- Financial Markets
Authors
Javier Amador
BBVA Research - Principal Economist
Iván Fernández
BBVA Research - Senior Economist
Documents and files
Report (PDF)
Do lower yields signal that the Fed might shift its focus back to growth risks?
English - February 27, 2025