US 10-Year Yield Pulls Back
2026-05-20 17:01
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
The yield on the 10-year US Treasury note fell to 4.60% on Wednesday from the 16-month high of 4.7% in the previous session as Washington signaled it is close to signing an agreement with Iran to end their conflict, taming pro-inflationary risks.
President Trump stated the US was on the final stages of talks with Tehran and three supertankers crossed the Strait of Hormuz with full cargoes, driving oil and fuel prices to retreat.
The surge in energy inflation this year had already shown signs of spreading to core areas of the economy, resulting in hawkish dissents in the last Fed rate decision.
Minutes from said decision are due shortly, set to unveil insights on how other FOMC members see risks of inflation rising further and whether the Fed has room for a lower balance sheet.
The Fed is still expected to keep the federal funds rate unchanged for the remainder of the year, although market-implied odds of a rate hike in December currently stand at around 50%.