U.S. Treasury yields jumped Friday as investors digested a better-than-expected September jobs report.
The 10-year Treasury yield was higher more than 11 basis points at 3.967%, while the yield on the 2-year Treasury was 15 basis points higher at 3.87%. Yields and prices have an inverted relationship. One basis point equals 0.01%.
Nonfarm payrolls grew by 254,000 in September, significantly exceeding the Dow Jones consensus estimate of 150,000.
The report points to a solid economy, but it also signals to the market that the Federal Reserve is more likely to move forward with smaller rate reductions ahead. The CME Group’s FedWatch tool shows traders are now pricing in an 89.5% chance of a quarter percentage point rate cut in November. The central bank lowered rates by a jumbo-sized half percentage point in September.
“I think we are moving back to perhaps a 25 basis point rate cut instead of 50 for November,” Saira Malik, head of Nuveen equities and fixed income, said Friday on CNBC’s “Squawk Box.”
The September jobs reading comes after Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell emphasized that the central bank has conducted a “recalibration” of its policy stance in order to focus on supporting the labor market and the economy as well as inflation.
That was given as justification for the jumbo 50-basis-point interest rate cut carried out by the Fed last month. The strength of the jobs data could therefore influence whether the Fed cuts rates again at its remaining meetings of the year, in November and December, and by how much.
Powell on Monday suggested it may be appropriate to cut rates at both meetings in smaller, 25-basis-point increments, but stressed the Fed was not on a “preset course.”