The
$1.9 trillion stimulus package looks likely to be approved by
Congress, bypassing Republican roadblocks. Friday's lacklustre
labour data appeared to highlight the urgency of getting state
support to the economy.
Ten-year borrowing costs extended their rise to the highest
since last March at 1.2%, while 30-year yields touched 2% for
the first time since mid-February 2020.
Ten-year yields are up around 30 bps since end-2020.
Rabobank analysts said the catalyst appeared to be Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen's comments "where she cited her
expectation that, with sufficient fiscal support, the U.S.
should be at full employment in 2022".
The Treasury curve steepened further, with the gap between 2-
and 10-year yields now at its widest since early-2017 at around
108.4 bps.
The 5-year/30-year Treasury yield gap widened to around 151.50
bps, a new October 2015 high.
Inflation expectations have been steadily rising in recent weeks
and on Monday, 10-year breakeven inflation rate rose briefly
above 2.20%, the highest since 2014.
Investors will be closely watching inflation data due on
Wednesday. Prices had increased 0.4% in December.
"Inflation is becoming a prominent theme with a growing
suspicion that its rise could be larger and longer-lasting than
the Fed currently anticipating," ING Bank told clients.
The moves haven't yet spooked global equity markets which hit a
record high on Monday.
(Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe; editing by Sujata Rao)
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