US Treasuries Surge as Trade War Overshadows Solid Jobs Data

Traders boosted their bets on Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts this year and US Treasuries rallied as a solid report on American jobs failed to calm markets.

Yields on two-year notes traded near their lowest since September 2022 and benchmark 10-year yields were down 11 basis points to 3.92% following the jobs reading amid fallout from US President Donald Trump’s tariffs. Money markets fully priced four quarter-point rate reductions this year and the chance of a fifth — up from just three cuts seen before the levies were announced.

With global financial markets in a tailspin — and China announcing it would impose a 34% tariff on all imports from the US, spurring fears of a global trade war — bond investors now turn to a speech by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for clues on the state of the US economy and the path for easing. Markets are already fully pricing in a quarter-point move by June, with a chance of a larger reduction.

“The bond market is seeming to keep its focus on the tariff news,” said Zachary Griffiths, head of investment-grade and macroeconomic strategy at CreditSights.

Nonfarm payrolls increased 228,000 last month compared to a Bloomberg consensus of economists’ estimate for a 140,000 gain. The unemployment rate ticked up to 4.2% as the participation rate climbed.

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