Post-CPI Gains Maintained
13-Feb-26 13:04 ET 10-Yr: +10/32..4.060%..
USD/JPY: 152.79..
EUR/USD: 1.1875Post-CPI Gains Maintained
- U.S. Treasuries are essentially back where they were during our last update after a brief push to fresh highs. The bulk of today's action followed the release of the January CPI report while the past few hours have seen a narrowing of the trading range. Today's advance has yields falling to fresh lows for the year with the 2-yr yield on the verge of settling at its lowest level since September 2022 while yields on 10s and 30s are back to levels seen at the start of December. Equities have overcome a shaky start with the S&P 500 (+0.5%) trimming this week's loss to 1.0%.
- Yield Check:
- 2-yr: -5 bps to 3.42%
- 3-yr: -5 bps to 3.46%
- 5-yr: -5 bps to 3.62%
- 10-yr: -4 bps to 4.06%
- 30-yr: -3 bps to 4.70%
Gains Extended After Cool CPI
13-Feb-26 10:17 ET 10-Yr: +11/32..4.062%..
USD/JPY: 153.03..
EUR/USD: 1.1865Gains Extended After Cool CPI
- U.S. Treasuries trade just below their highs after rising from their starting levels in reaction to the January CPI report, which was cooler than expected at the headline level (0.2%; Briefing.com consensus 0.3%) with the year-over-year growth rate decelerating to 2.4% from 2.7% in December. Core CPI (0.3%; Briefing.com consensus 0.3%) matched expectations, but the year-over-year growth rate still decelerated to 2.5% from 2.6%. The post-data advance has pressured the 2-yr yield to a fresh low for the year with the 2025 low from October (3.378%) now just four basis points away. Equities are off to a flat start with the Nasdaq (-0.2%) showing some early weakness.
- Yield Check:
- 2-yr: -5 bps to 3.42%
- 3-yr: -5 bps to 3.46%
- 5-yr: -5 bps to 3.62%
- 10-yr: -4 bps to 4.07%
- 30-yr: -3 bps to 4.71%
January Headline CPI Cooler Than Expected
13-Feb-26 08:55 ET 10-Yr: +3/32..4.085%..
USD/JPY: 153.03..
EUR/USD: 1.1874Data Recon
- Total CPI increased 0.2% month-over-month in January (Briefing.com consensus: 0.3%) and was up 2.4% year-over-year, versus 2.7% for the 12 months ending in December. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, increased 0.3% month-over-month (Briefing.com consensus: 0.3%) and was up 2.5% year-over-year, versus 2.6% for the 12 months ending in December.
- The key takeaway from the report is that it showed some encouraging disinflation on a year-over-year basis, which the market will perceive as an opening for the Fed to consider additional rate cuts even with GDP growth running above potential.
- Yield Check:
- 2-yr: -3 bps to 3.44%
- 3-yr: -3 bps to 3.48%
- 5-yr: -2 bps to 3.64%
- 10-yr: -2 bps to 4.08%
- 30-yr: -1 bp to 4.72%
Overnight Treasury Market Summary
13-Feb-26 08:01 ET 10-Yr: +1/32..4.102%..
USD/JPY: 153.27..
EUR/USD: 1.1862Short End Ahead as CPI Looms
- U.S. Treasuries are on track for a slightly higher start in most tenors ahead of the 8:30 ET release of January CPI (Briefing.com consensus 0.3%; prior 0.3%) and Core CPI (Briefing.com consensus 0.3%; prior 0.2%). Treasury futures followed yesterday's rally to fresh February highs in longer tenors with a slow overnight retreat that finally found some support after the start of the European session. Global equity markets have had a mostly lower showing to end the week while the news flow was limited. There was growing speculation that President Trump will extend the current trade terms with China when he meets with President Xi in April. There were also reports that tariffs on metals and aluminum goods could be reduced. Crude oil is deepening yesterday's retreat while the U.S. Dollar Index is up 0.1% at 97.06.
- Yield Check:
- 2-yr: -2 bps to 3.45%
- 3-yr: -1 bp to 3.50%
- 5-yr: -1 bp to 3.66%
- 10-yr: UNCH at 4.10%
- 30-yr: +1 bp to 4.74%
- News:
- An adviser to Japan's Prime Minister Takaichi said that the Bank of Japan may forego a rate hike in March but is likely to raise rates later in the year.
- Officials from the U.S. and Taiwan formalized a trade deal.
- European Central Bank policymaker Kazaks said that the ECB is in a good position regarding rates while policymaker Nagel said that geopolitical "rivalries" could result in higher inflation.
- China's January New Loans reached CNY4.71 trln (expected CNY5.00 trln; last CNY910 bln), January outstanding loans grew 6.1% yr/yr (expected 6.2%; last 6.4%), and January total social financing reached CNY7.22 trln (expected CNY7.05 trln; last CYN2.21 trln). January House Prices were down 3.1% yr/yr (last -2.7%).
- South Korea's January Import Price Index was down 1.2% yr/yr (last 0.5%) while export price index was up 7.8% yr/yr (last 5.0%).
- New Zealand's January Business PMI hit 55.2 (last 56.1). December External Migration & Visitors rose 7.0% yr/yr (last 8.2%). Q1 Inflation Expectations accelerated to 2.4% from 2.3%.
- Eurozone's Q4 GDP expanded 0.3% qtr/qtr, as expected (last 0.3%), growing 1.3% yr/yr, as expected (last 1.4%). Q4 Employment increased by 0.2% qtr/qtr (expected 0.1%; last 0.2%), rising 0.7% yr/yr (expected 0.6%; last 0.6%). December trade surplus reached EUR12.6 bln (expected EUR11.8 bln; last EUR9.3 bln).
- Germany's January WPI was up 0.9% m/m (expected 0.1%; last -0.2%), rising 1.2% yr/yr (last 1.2%).
- Spain's January CPI was down 0.4% m/m, as expected (last 0.3%) but up 2.3% yr/yr (expected 2.4%; last 2.9%). January Core CPI was up 2.6% yr/yr, as expected (last 2.6%).
- Swiss January CPI was down 0.1% m/m (expected 0.0%; last 0.0%) but up 0.1% yr/yr, as expected (last 0.1%).
- Commodities:
- WTI Crude: -0.6% to $62.48/bbl
- Gold: +0.8% to $4986.90/ozt
- Copper: -0.8% to $5.738/lb
- Currencies:
- EUR/USD: -0.1% to 1.1862
- GBP/USD: -0.1% to 1.3606
- USD/CNH: +0.2% to 6.9051
- USD/JPY: +0.4% to 153.27
- Data out Today:
- 8:30 ET: January CPI (Briefing.com consensus 0.3%; prior 0.3%) and Core CPI (Briefing.com consensus 0.3%; prior 0.2%)