U.S. Treasuries Gain After Inflation Surge In Line With Expectations

U.S. Treasuries shook off the steepest jump to consumer-price inflation in four decades and absorbed a 10-year note sale, with the figures reinforcing already widespread anticipation that the Federal Reserve will start raising interest rates in March.

The December inflation figures were in line with the bond market’s expectations, and while benchmark Treasury yields initially rose moderately across the curve soon after the release, buyers soon emerged. The year-on-year jump in the consumer price index matched a forecast increase of 7%, while the core rate, which excluded food and energy prices, was a little hotter, expanding at a pace of 5.5%, versus an expected 5.4%.

The reaction was muted in part because yields have already surged since the start of the year as traders brace for the Fed to begin hiking rates and wrapping up the bond purchases that have flooded markets with cash for nearly two years. Ahead of the inflation report, positioning in the broad Treasury market was the most net bearish since late 2017, according to the latest survey by JPMorgan Chase & Co.