Treasury Yields Fall on Friday
2026-03-13 12:56
By
Joana Taborda
1 min. read
The yield on the US 10-year Treasury note fell about 2bps to 4.25% on Friday, marking its first decline in four sessions, as investors found some relief in a slight easing of oil prices following this week’s rally.
At the same time, traders assessed a fresh batch of key economic data, including the PCE report, which showed the annual PCE inflation rate slowing to 2.8%.
Meanwhile, GDP growth was revised sharply lower to 0.7% in Q4, half the initial estimate of 1.4%.
As a result, traders reinforced bets on one Federal Reserve rate cut this year, possibly in September.
The central bank will decide on monetary policy next week and, although no changes to the federal funds rate are expected, markets will closely watch for clues about policymakers’ outlook for the remainder of the year.
The benchmark US yield is still up nearly 13bps for the week, amid mounting concerns about an energy-driven inflationary spiral and worries over fiscal imbalances linked to war-related spending.