US Treasury Yields Hit Multimonth Highs as Focus Shifts to Fed

Treasury yields climbed to the highest in more than two months, following losses in most global government-bond markets, ahead of a Federal Reserve interest-rate decision that may alter expectations for monetary policy in 2026.

US yields rose from 2 to 3 basis points across the curve, with intermediate maturities proving the weakest. The market trimmed losses and a sale of $58 billion of three-year notes at 1 p.m. New York time, arrived at a lower than forecast yield, a sign of better than anticipated demand. Auctions of $39 billion 10-years and $22 billion 30-years are set for Tuesday and Thursday, respectively.

The Treasury shifted this week’s auction schedule to accommodate the Fed’s two-day meeting, which concludes with Wednesday afternoon’s announcement. Traders see a roughly 90% chance that the central bank will deliver a third straight quarter-point reduction, to a range of 3.5% to 3.75%. Market participants will focus on officials’ outlook for 2026 — through their so-called dot plot — with inflation remaining stubbornly elevated.

“The expected Fed rate cut this week is expected to come with a hawkish tone and a potentially extended pause next year,” said John Canavan, lead analyst at Oxford Economics. “A strong signal that the Fed is prepared for an extended pause could leave investors disappointed,” with markets pricing in greater than 90% odds of another cut by April.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield, which helps determine borrowing costs for home loans and corporate borrowing, rose 4 basis points to 4.17% Monday. The 4.2% level in the maturity has capped rates since September. The 30-year yield was around 4.82%, near the highest since September.

treasury 10 year yield

In recent weeks, a swap-market proxy for where the Fed ends its current easing cycle - the so-called terminal rate - has jumped from under 3% toward 3.2%, its highest reading since July.