Advertisement

T-bond yields jump as Fed stands pat; stocks push ahead

Share

This article was originally on a blog post platform and may be missing photos, graphics or links. See About archive blog posts.

The Federal Reserve decided today to play chicken with Treasury bond traders: Despite rising yields on long-term government bonds in recent weeks, the central bank opted against expanding its program of buying the securities to rein-in interest rates.

Traders’ reaction was to dump Treasuries, driving yields sharply higher. The 10-year T-note yield, a benchmark for mortgage rates, has surged to 3.10%, up from 3% on Tuesday and the highest since Nov. 25.

Advertisement

The stock market, however, still closed broadly higher, though off its best levels of the day. With many investors continuing to bet that the worst of the recession is behind us, the Dow Jones industrials ended with a gain of 168.78 points, or 2.1%, to 8,185.73, a new high since the rally began March 10.

By contrast, it was a tough day for investors in longer-term Treasury issues across the board, as prices dropped and yields rose again. Hiding out in ‘safe’ government bonds, the smart move in the second half of 2008, is a money-loser for many investors this year.

The government today sold $26 billion in new seven-year notes at a yield of 2.63%, slightly above expectations. And earlier, the Treasury announced plans to boost sales of 30-year bonds this year, as Uncle Sam’s borrowing reaches unprecedented levels.

As I noted in this earlier post, with the supply of Treasuries ballooning -- and with yields moving higher in recent weeks -- the bond market had been hoping that the Fed would pledge to expand its purchases of Treasuries from the $300-billion target it set in February.

But Chairman Ben S. Bernanke and peers decided to take their chances in a stare-down with bond traders.

In its post-meeting statement today, the Fed’s comment on its Treasury-purchase program was that it would ‘continue to evaluate the timing and overall amounts of its purchases of securities in light of the evolving economic outlook and conditions in financial markets.’

Translation: The Fed isn’t yet concerned about rising yields.

That makes sense, on one level: long-term Treasury yields are up in part because investors are feeling better and are more willing to buy stocks, corporate bonds and other riskier assets. . . .

Advertisement

‘The demand for risk-free assets is ebbing while the supply of risk-free government paper is increasing rapidly. Hence, higher Treasury yields,’ said Michael Darda, economist at MKM Partners. Corporate bond yields, he noted, have been dropping even as Treasury yields have risen. And 30-year mortgage rates have been treading water around the 4.8% level for four weeks.

With that backdrop, the Fed can afford to keep some ammunition in reserve, said Tony Crescenzi, bond market strategist at Miller Tabak & Co.

‘Only if the anchor (Treasuries) lifts so much that it causes the boat (mortgage rates and corporate and other fixed-income rates in the private credit markets) to drift will the Fed have to expand its program’ of buying government bonds, Crescenzi said in a note to clients.

-- Tom Petruno

Advertisement