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Treasuries pare losses after Trump calls for mortgage purchases

Elizabeth Stanton / Bloomberg
Elizabeth Stanton / Bloomberg • 3 min read
Treasuries pare losses after Trump calls for mortgage purchases
The yield on 10-year notes — a benchmark for mortgage rates — edged lower shortly before close on Thursday.
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(Jan 9): Long-dated Treasuries trimmed losses after President Donald Trump called for the purchase of US$200 billion ($257.08 billion) of mortgage bonds in an effort to bring down housing costs.

The yield on 10-year notes — a benchmark for mortgage rates — edged lower shortly before close on Thursday after Trump’s post on Truth Social in which he said he instructed “representatives” to buy the mortgage-backed securities. The 30-year yield moved close to unchanged on the day.

Yields, though, remained higher on the day by as much as two basis points as investors anticipated Friday’s December employment data and possible Supreme Court strike-down of tariffs that have improved the US fiscal position.

Treasuries have “a strong underlying bid” that may limit any selloff on strong employment data, while a tariffs ruling “could send rates in either direction,” Andrew Brenner, the vice-chairman at Natalliance Securities wrote to customers.

December employment data have the potential to alter expectations for Federal Reserve (Fed) interest-rate cuts this year, following three cuts at the end of last year in response to signs of job-market weakness. With several Fed officials inclined to pause the cuts because of inflation risk, traders of short-term interest rate products are pricing in minimal odds of a move on Jan 28, the next decision date. Two cuts are priced in by year end.

In Treasury options trading Thursday, a call option on 10-year note futures expiring on Friday was bought for US$7.5 million, providing protection for the holder from a market rally.

See also: The Fed’s six big challenges in 2026

Beyond Friday, the outlook for rate cuts is subject to the White House announcing a nominee to succeed chair Jerome Powell, whose term expires in May and whom US President Trump has said won’t be reappointed because rates are too high. The administration has teased the announcement of a nominee for months, and The New York Times reported that Trump in a Wednesday interview said he’d made up his mind but hadn’t told anyone the decision.

As for the possible ruling on tariffs the US administration instituted this year, the prospect of an end to the accumulation of revenue that helped narrow the US budget deficit in fiscal 2025 may draw a knee-jerk negative reaction from the Treasury market. That was the case when oral arguments took place in early November, despite the broad array of alternative legal options at the White House’s disposal.

Supply considerations also continue to influence yield levels. As expected, this week is shaping up as a historically large one for sales of new investment-grade corporate bonds, which compete with Treasuries for investor cash. The US$88.4 billion sold over the first three days puts the week among the five biggest on record.

See also: US trade gap shrinks to smallest since 2009 on drop in imports

Meanwhile, the first Treasury coupon auctions of the year are set for Monday, including three- and 10-year notes. All of next week’s auctions fall earlier in the week than normal in order to conclude by their Jan 15 settlement date.

Uploaded by Isabelle Francis

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