No Data
No Data
More and more evidence is emerging: foreign investors sold off U.S. Treasury bonds in large quantities in April.
① Increasing evidence suggests that as the tariff war initiated by USA President Trump continues to escalate, concerns about foreign investors accelerating the selling of US Treasury bonds may have indeed become a reality in April; ② The latest auction of 2-year US Treasuries conducted on Tuesday also shows a lack of demand from overseas investors.
CICC: High tariffs may trigger the Federal Reserve's "recession-style" interest rate cuts.
China International Capital Corporation expects that under the circumstances of maintaining high tariffs, the Federal Reserve may cut interest rates faster and more significantly.
Trump's tariff policy has triggered a wave of selling, and foreign investors are starting to withdraw from the U.S. bond market.
As President Trump reignites the trade war, concerns about foreign investors massively selling off US Treasuries are becoming a reality.
The collapse of the USA's "soft" data continues, with the Richmond Federal Reserve's manufacturing new Order expectations hitting a record low.
On Tuesday, the two pieces of "soft data" released by the USA performed poorly, continuing the trend of the previous collapse of several soft data.
Buyers of U.S. Treasury bonds have started to "strike": the overseas demand for 2-year U.S. Treasury bonds has reached a two-year low.
On Tuesday local time, the USA Treasury auctioned 69 billion dollars of two-year government bonds, with the final winning yield rate at 3.795%, the lowest level since last September, down from 3.984% on March 25.
U.S. Short-term Yields Climb With Treasury Auctions Set to Begin