Bond Market Update

Updated: 03-Sep-25 15:09 ET
Treasury Market Summary

Tuesday Swoon Reversed

  • U.S. Treasuries ended Wednesday with solid gains across the curve that wiped out the market's losses from the start of the week. The trading day started with slight gains after a night that saw limited movement in Treasury futures. However, ongoing pressure on longer-dated bonds in Japan and the U.K. continued, sending Japan's 30-yr yield to a fresh record near 3.18% while the U.K.'s 30-yr Gilt yield hit a record at 5.75%. On a somewhat related note, the U.S. 30-yr bond underperformed on Tuesday, but it led today's rally, sending its yield back to its 50-day moving average (4.892%). Treasuries spent the opening hour near their starting levels before embarking on a rally that continued into the early afternoon. The buying, which sent the 2-yr yield to its lowest close in nearly a year, accelerated after today's economic data showed that job openings in July decreased to 7.181 million, a level not seen since early 2021. Employment will remain in focus for the remainder of the week with the August ADP Employment Change report (Briefing.com consensus 69,000; prior 104,000) scheduled to be released at 8:15 ET tomorrow while the official Employment Situation Report (Briefing.com consensus 78,000; prior 73,000) from the Bureau of Labor Statistics will be released on Friday morning. Crude oil gave back yesterday's gain amid speculation about a potential output increase while the U.S. Dollar Index fell 0.3% to 98.14.
  • Yield Check:
    • 2-yr: -5 bps to 3.61%
    • 3-yr: -5 bps to 3.58%
    • 5-yr: -6 bps to 3.69%
    • 10-yr: -7 bps to 4.21%
    • 30-yr: -8 bps to 4.89%
  • News:
    • The Federal Reserve's Beige Book for August showed no significant change in activity since the last report. There was persistent tariff-related uncertainty while retailers and hospitality businesses offered discounts to maintain customer flow. Eleven Districts saw little or no change in overall employment levels while ten Districts reported moderate or modest price growth.
    • OPEC+ will consider an output hike at its meeting scheduled for Sunday.
    • Japan's Prime Minister Ishiba repeated that he intends to maintain his post, but his party may call a leadership election.
    • European Central Bank policymaker de Cos acknowledged the weakening growth outlook but also said that the central bank's main priority is fighting inflation.
    • China's August S&P Global Services PMI hit 53.0 (expected 52.4; last 52.6).
    • Japan's August Services PMI hit 53.1 (expected 52.7; last 52.7).
    • South Korea's Q2 GDP expanded 0.7% qtr/qtr (expected 0.6%; last 0.6%), growing 0.6% yr/yr (expected 0.5%; last 0.5%).
    • India's August Services PMI hit 62.9 (expected 65.6; last 60.5).
    • Hong Kong's August Manufacturing PMI hit 50.7 (last 49.2).
    • Australia's Q2 GDP expanded 0.6% qtr/qtr (expected 0.5%; last 0.3%), growing 1.8% yr/yr (expected 1.6%; last 1.4%). August Services PMI hit 55.8 (expected 55.1; last 54.1) and August AIG Manufacturing Index hit -20.9 (last -23.9).
    • Eurozone's August Services PMI hit 50.5 (expected 50.7; last 51.0). July PPI was up 0.4% m/m (expected 0.2%; last 0.8%), rising 0.2% yr/yr (expected 0.1%; last 0.6%).
    • Germany's August Services PMI hit 49.3 (expected 50.1; last 50.6).
    • U.K.'s August Services PMI hit 54.2 (expected 53.6; last 51.8).
    • France's August Services PMI hit 49.8 (expected 49.7; last 48.5).
    • Italy's August Services PMI hit 51.5 (expected 52.1; last 52.3).
    • Spain's August Services PMI hit 53.2 (expected 54.4; last 55.1).
  • Today's Data:
    • Factory orders declined 1.3% month-over-month in July (Briefing.com consensus: -1.4%) following a 4.8% decline in June. Excluding transportation, factory orders increased 0.6% month-over-month following a 0.4% increase in June. Shipments of manufactured goods jumped 0.9% on the heels of a 0.6% increase in June.
      • The key takeaway from the report is that the weakness in factory orders in July was concentrated in the transportation space, so the weakness was not as acute as the headline might suggest. New orders for primary metals (+1.6%), machinery (+1.9%), computers and electronic products (+1.2%), and electrical equipment, appliances, and components (+1.9%) were all up in a good sign for factory order activity.
    • Job openings decreased to 7.181 million in July from a revised 7.357 million (from 7.437 million) in June.
    • The weekly MBA Mortgage Index fell 1.2% to follow last week's 0.5% decrease. The Purchase Index was down 3.1% while the Refinance Index was up 0.9%.
  • Commodities:
    • WTI crude: -2.4% to $64.00/bbl
    • Gold: +1.2% to $3635.40/ozt
    • Copper: -0.2% to $4.63/lb
  • Currencies:
    • EUR/USD: +0.2% to 1.1660
    • GBP/USD: +0.4% to 1.3440
    • USD/CNH: +0.1% to 7.1397
    • USD/JPY: -0.2% to 148.00
  • The Day Ahead:
    • 8:15 ET: August ADP Employment Change (Briefing.com consensus 69,000; prior 104,000)
    • 8:30 ET: Revised Q2 Productivity (Briefing.com consensus 2.4%; prior 2.4%), revised Q2 Unit Labor Costs (Briefing.com consensus 1.6%; prior 1.6%), weekly Initial Claims (Briefing.com consensus 232,000; prior 229,000), Continuing Claims (prior 1.954 mln), and July Trade Balance (Briefing.com consensus -$64.2 bln; prior -$60.2 bln)
    • 9:45 ET: Final August S&P Global U.S. Services PMI (prior 55.4)
    • 10:00 ET: August ISM Services (Briefing.com consensus 50.5%; prior 50.1%)
    • 10:30 ET: Weekly natural gas inventories (prior +18 bcf)
    • 13:00 ET: Weekly crude oil inventories (prior -2.39 mln)
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