Bond Traders’ Big Week Ends With Fed Rate Cuts Even Less Certain

The bond market is growing less convinced by the day that the Federal Reserve will embark on two further interest-rate cuts this year.

Traders are pricing in roughly 20% odds that the Fed holds rates steady in either November or December. This time last week, even after Friday’s blockbuster jobs report, swaps still implied more than 50 basis points of cuts by year-end, likely via consecutive cuts.

Treasuries have slumped this week as a result. A Bloomberg gauge of US bonds is poised for a fourth-straight week of declines — its worst streak since April. Yields on 10-year notes are back above 4%, and the 30-year bond’s yield touched 4.42%, the highest level since July 30.

The shift reflects a slew of mixed reports on the US economy that have failed to make the case for significantly looser monetary policy. While the Fed’s so-called dot plot showed officials’ median rate expectations project two further cuts this year, nine of 19 officials saw only one reduction at most.

That division among the hawks and doves at the Fed has been on display this week. A handful of Fed officials, including New York Fed President John Williams, mostly shrugged off higher-than-expected consumer inflation gauges released Thursday and signaled they support continued rate reductions. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic, however, said he would consider a pause in rate cuts, and Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan reiterated Friday that interest rates should move at a slow pace to a more normal level.

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