10-Year Yields Imply Fed May Keep Rate Higher for Longer

 | Feb 15, 2023 20:02

US consumer inflation continues to ease, but less so than expected in January. Yesterday’s update suggests that the Federal Reserve will see the latest numbers as a new sign that pricing pressure isn’t cooling fast enough. In turn, the case may have strengthened at the central bank for keeping interest rates higher for longer.

One central bank official on Tuesday advised that lifting rates “for a longer period than previously anticipated” may be on the table. Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, a voting member on the rate-setting Federal Open Market Committee in 2023, said,

“When inflation repeatedly comes in higher than the forecasts, as it did last year, or when the jobs report comes in with hundreds of thousands more jobs than anyone expected, as happened a couple of weeks ago, it is hard to have confidence in any outlook,”

Despite conditions that appear to support a higher US 10-year Treasury yield, the benchmark rate remains moderately below its recent peak. The 10-year yield ticked up to 3.77% on Tuesday (Feb. 14), roughly a half percentage point below October’s high.