rates likely staying higher-for-longer will impact the U.S. central bank's economic projections. Data on Friday showed the U.S. services sector grew at a steady clip in February, with new orders and employment rising to more than one-year highs, suggesting the economy continued to expand in the first quarter.
The data is second-tier and had little impact on the Treasury market, Shipley said. The yield on 10-year notes slid 10.6 basis points to 3.967%, while two-year yields, which are sensitive to interest rate expectations, fell 4.1 basis points to 4.863%.
The gap between two- and 10-year yields , seen as a recession harbinger when the shorter-dated notes are higher than the longer end, remained inverted at -89.8 basis points.
Money market expectations that the Fed may go back to a 50 basis-point hike in its policy rate at the end of a two-day meeting on March 22 gained traction earlier this week, though the consensus remained largely around a hike of 25 basis points. U.S. unemployment data on March 10 and the Consumer Price Index on March 14 will help determine the Fed's next steps as it seeks to slow inflation to its 2% target. Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s testimony to Congress next week could also give some indications on the monetary policy outlook. (Reporting by Davide Barbuscia and Herbert Lash in New York Editing by Elaine Hardcastle and Matthew Lewis)
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