Updated
Updated · Reuters · Apr 27
U.S. 10-year Treasury yields see lowest volatility since 1991 as trading range narrows
Updated
Updated · Reuters · Apr 27

U.S. 10-year Treasury yields see lowest volatility since 1991 as trading range narrows

8 articles · Updated · Reuters · Apr 27
  • A Bollinger Bands gauge shows 10-year Treasury yield volatility at its lowest since August 1991, with yields confined between 4.0% and 4.6%.
  • Technical analysis indicates yields are forming a symmetrical triangle, suggesting a potential breakout, though the direction remains uncertain. Staying above 4.23% favors higher yields, while dropping below could signal downward pressure.
  • The unusually calm market may precede a significant move, as the compressed trading range often leads to volatility spikes. These developments influence interest rates across the U.S. economy.
A rare 1991 signal predicts a market shock. Will interest rates soar or plummet?
U.S. bond yields are rising, but the dollar is falling. Has the world lost faith in American debt?
Is the bond market's prolonged calm the quiet before a devastating financial storm?
With U.S. debt spiraling, will a bond market breakout trigger the next economic crisis?
Can the Federal Reserve fight inflation if rising rates worsen the national debt crisis?
Is the window for affordable mortgages and loans about to slam shut for good?