TechFlow news: On March 3, according to JIN10 Data, U.S. Treasury bonds were sold off, driving yields higher, as the U.S. and Israel bombed Iran amid an escalating conflict—disrupting energy markets and triggering a flight of safe-haven capital. Although the U.S. dollar strengthened, concerns over energy-driven inflation and the high long-term costs of protracted conflict dampened demand for U.S. government bonds. Marc Chandler of Bannockburn stated: “This is the combined result of position adjustments and inflationary pressures stemming from rising oil prices.” He noted that investors have pushed back their bets on Federal Reserve rate cuts from July to September. The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose by 0.090 percentage points to 4.051%; the yield on the 2-year Treasury rose by 0.108 percentage points to 3.485%.
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