In the beginning of the second quarter, the U.S. Treasury market is once again shifting to a trading framework centered on the dual resilience of growth and inflation. The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury rose to 4.3285%, with the 2-year yield at 3.8072%, indicating a simultaneous rise in both long-term and short-term yields. This shows that bond investors, when assessing the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) policy path, are placing more emphasis on manufacturing price pressures and consumption resilience rather than on individual weak indicators. Although interest rate futures have shifted from pricing in rate hikes to expecting slight rate cuts, the reaction of spot rates suggests that the market remains highly vigilant about "no rate cuts within the year."
Repricing Macro Signals
The current rise in yields is not triggered by a single piece of data but rather by a combination of multiple macroeconomic variables. ADP data shows an increase of 62,000 private sector jobs in March, slightly above the consensus expectation of 40,000; February retail sales grew by 0.6%, also above the forecast of 0.5%. More crucially, the ISM Manufacturing PMI rose to 52.7, the highest since August 2022, indicating continued recovery in U.S. industrial activity. Meanwhile, the payment price index jumped from 70.5 to 78.3, suggesting that business input costs are rising again, dampening market confidence in short-term easing.
Supply Chain Transmission
From a supply chain perspective, the significance of rising manufacturing price indicators lies in their potential transmission through raw materials, transportation, inventory, and end prices. If the Middle East situation has previously disrupted supply chains, thereby raising factory procurement costs, fluctuations in upstream energy and intermediate product prices will first be reflected in manufacturing enterprises' profit margins, gradually affecting durable and consumer goods pricing. While nominal retail sales growth remains positive, if actual retail sales weaken post-inflation adjustment, it indicates that the end-users' ability to absorb rising prices may not be stable. This "strong cost, fragmented demand" structure makes it difficult for the bond market to quickly trade on comprehensive rate cuts.
Yield Curve and Institutional Views
The yield curve is slightly flattening, with the 2-year and 10-year spread at 51.8 basis points. The rise in long-term yields is slightly higher, indicating that investors are demanding a higher term premium to compensate for inflation and fiscal uncertainties. Kevin Flanagan from WisdomTree believes the Fed is more likely to remain on hold in the short to medium term. David Rosenberg, founder of Rosenberg Research, warns that the breadth of ADP job gains is lacking, and that inflation-adjusted real retail sales are likely to cumulatively be around -1% for the first quarter. This indicates that the bond market is not in unanimous agreement but is in a "strong macro surface, fragmented micro details" rebalancing phase.
Geopolitical Variables and Asset Prices
Trump's statements regarding the Iran conflict have temporarily eased risk-averse sentiment, driving stocks higher, crude prices lower, and reducing demand for U.S. Treasuries. If oil prices continue to decline, concerns about imported inflation may marginally ease, providing some support for long-term U.S. Treasuries; however, if supply shocks recur, manufacturing price pressures may once again dominate bond market pricing. For investors, the key going forward is not a single instance of data exceeding expectations, but whether price pressures continue to transmit more broadly to the consumer and wage chains.




