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10-Year Treasury Yield Set for Largest Weekly Jump in Six Months

TipRanksDecember 05, 2025 at 8:40 PMFull Content
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Gist

The 10-year Treasury yield surged to its largest weekly gain in six months, driven by mixed labor data and rising skepticism about future Fed rate cuts.

LLM Summary

The 10-year Treasury yield rose 10 bps to 4.141% this week, marking its biggest weekly jump since June, fueled by cooler-than-expected core PCE data and conflicting labor reports. Market expectations for a December Fed rate cut remain high, but growing skepticism about further cuts in 2026 is pushing yields higher.

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10-Year Treasury Yield Set for Largest Weekly Jump in Six Months

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!10-Year Treasury Yield Set for Largest Weekly Jump in Six Months

The 10-year Treasury yield is up by 10 bps this week to 4.141% and is on track for its largest weekly gain since June. The yield is up by 2.9 bps on Friday as investors digest September’s cooler-than-expected core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index, which was delayed due to the government shutdown that ended on November 12.

Core PCE rose by 0.3% from the prior month and 2.8% on an annual basis. Economists were expecting increases of 0.3% and 2.9%, respectively. Following the data, the odds of a 25 bps rate cut at the December 9-10 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting remain elevated at 87.2%.

10-Year Yield Climbs on Mixed Labor Data and Hawkish Fed Outlook for 2026

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The 10-year yield has reacted to several data points this week, including November layoffs hitting a three-year high and initial jobless claims falling to a three-year low. A rising 10-year yield potentially signals that investors expect higher inflation and fewer rate cuts ahead.

“Expectations have been adjusted in a more hawkish direction for the Fed,” said Deutsche Bank U.S. rates strategist Steven Zeng. “Investors are growing skeptical of more rate cuts next year.”

Furthermore, National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett is widely expected to be President Trump’s nominee to replace Fed Chair Jerome Powell, a move that could lead to a new era of monetary policy.