The bond market on Monday saw a split reaction to President Donald Trump’s tariffs on Canada, Mexico and China, with short-term yields surging but longer-term yields relatively unchanged.
The U.S. Treasury yield curve could flatten in the wake of President Trump’s weekend tariff announcements, say ING rates strategists in a note. A yield curve flattening means that the spread between ...
The Treasury yield curve flattened the most in 11 weeks on concern US President Donald Trump’s move to unleash tariffs on top ...
The risk of a tit-for-tat trade war led traders to boost bets the Federal Reserve will be more careful on lowering interest ...
The FX market reaction has been textbook risk-off, with a defensive surge in the U.S. dollar sending the DXY gapping over 1% ...
The Trump administration has surprised FX markets by imposing large tariffs earlier than expected. The Dollar has ...
January's municipal bond supply "will end up being heavier compared with the normally slow start of the year, but the ...
Sovereign prices its second international deal this month, adding two new reference points to eurobond yield curve ...
Volatile end to the trading week as confusion over US trade policy roiled markets. US dollar ended stronger. The S&P reversed ...
US imposes big tariffs against Canada, Mexico and China; US PCE inflation rises; Japan data good; India cuts income taxes; ...
And in a note published Sunday, Goldman strategists led by David Kostin have set out the equity market implications of Trump's latest move. One way stocks may come under pressure is that large tariffs ...
Buying the dip after a massive liquidation flush and higher demand for stablecoin could fuel growth in bitcoin and the ...