Treasuries Gain as Fed Cuts, Traders Wager on Two More in 2026

US Treasuries rose after the Federal Reserve lowered interest rates by a quarter-point for a third straight meeting and left the door open to additional policy easing in 2026.

Yields fell across the curve on Wednesday, sinking from multimonth highs. But the Fed-sensitive two-year note led the rally, tumbling almost 8 basis points to 3.54%, for its largest one-day slide in two months. Treasuries extended gains after Fed Chair Jerome Powell highlighted concern about weaker hiring.

The upshot is that the meeting offered relief for bond investors who’d been bracing for a stronger indication from the Fed that it would pause after this move as it awaited more economic data. Traders stuck to their bets that the Fed will lower rates in two quarter-point steps next year, even as the central bank’s newly released projections — its so-called dot plot — indicated only one such reduction in 2026.

“Bottom line, everyone was looking for a hawkish cut and it was less so than expected, so maybe it’s a bit of a relief rally in Treasuries,” said Jack McIntyre, a portfolio manager at Brandywine Global Investment Management.

BB traders look graph

The central bank lowered the benchmark lending rate to a range of 3.50%-3.75%, as expected. Powell’s remarks on the labor market offset his broader view that the Fed’s combined 0.75 percentage point in easing since September leaves the central bank “well positioned” to wait for more clarity on the job market and inflation. He also said he expects the inflationary impact of higher US tariffs will fade soon.

Two regional Fed presidents - Austan Goolsbee from Chicago and Jeff Schmid from Kansas City - preferred to keep rates unchanged. Governor Stephen Miran, whom Trump appointed to the central bank in September, dissented again in favor of a larger, half-point reduction.