Treasury Yields Jolted From Highs on Prospect of Fed Letup

The Treasury market was upended Friday by a surge in wagers that circumstances will allow Federal Reserve to slow its pace of rate increases as early as year-end.

Yields across the spectrum rose to new multiyear highs in early trading on the prospect of unrelenting Fed rate increases to control inflation. That was followed by a violent reversal in short-dated yields as that outlook was undercut, in part by comments by San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly, who said it’ll be necessary for the central bank to decrease the size of its rate increases, to 50 or 25 basis points, without specifying when.

The move was most pronounced in the five-year sector, where yields rose as much as six basis points to 4.504%, the highest level since 2007, then sank nearly to 4.30%. The reversal in short-dated Treasuries was accompanied by traders slashing the expected Fed policy rate peak in 2023 -- which had exceeded 5% on Thursday -- to back under 4.9%.

The move was already under way before Daly spoke, sparked by a Wall Street Journal report that some Fed officials are concerned about overtightening. The central bank has raised the policy rate by three percentage points since March, with another three-quarter-point increase anticipated next month. The article said policy makers are also likely to debate whether to signal that a smaller hike is possible in December.