US Yields Climb as Inflation Threat Imperils Fed Rate Cuts

Treasuries fell for a fourth day — lifting yields to the highest levels in several weeks — as rising oil prices ignited inflation expectations and dented the outlook for Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts.

Yields for most tenors were three to four basis points higher as the US benchmark crude oil futures contract topped $81 a barrel for the first time since mid-2024. It’s climbed from under $70 this week after the US attacked Iran on Feb. 28, leading traders to wager on a later start to any Fed cuts this year.

Short-term inflation expectations soared, and traders abandoned wagers on more than one quarter-point rate cut by the Fed this year. As recently as the end of last week, two cuts were fully priced in. Also, data compiled by the Fed’s Atlanta branch indicated the market-implied odds of no move this year were about 25%, up from 17% on Friday.

“In the short term, rising oil prices feed through to higher bond yields,” said Noah Wise, a senior portfolio manager at Allspring Global Investments. “It does complicate things for the Fed.”

The one-year US inflation swap rate — representing the expected annual growth rate of the consumer price index — jumped more than 10 basis points to about 2.75%, the highest level since November. The CPI rose 2.4% over the 12 months through January.

Fed policymakers, who cut interest rates three times last year in response to a softening labor market, paused in January, with several expressing the view that inflation remained too high to lower rates further in the short term.

While the selloff stalled amid declines in US equities and a flurry of buying in Treasury futures, it was backstopped by the US government’s weekly tally of new jobless claims. The initial claims figure was slightly lower than economists estimated, a sign of labor-market strength and another challenge to wagers on Fed interest-rate cuts that benefit bonds.

“The market is not going to trade on economic data today,” said John Brady, managing director at RJ O’Brien. “It remains about the widening war in the Middle East and the energy markets.”