
U.S. government bond prices fell and drove up yields after Emmanuel Macron emerged victorious in the runoff for the French presidential election, easing geopolitical worries that anti-EU Marine Le Pen would win.
The yield for the benchmark 10-year Treasury note rose 2.4 bps to 2.376 percent, its highest level in six weeks. Meanwhile, the yield on the two-year Treasury note edged up 1.2 bps to the fourth day in a row to 1.330 percent, its longest winning stretch since early March. The yield for the long bond or the 30-year note advanced 2.5 bps to 3.013 percent.
Risk appetite improved and investors shed their safe-haven assets as Macron's conclusive defeat of the far-right contender Le Pen was perceived as a decisively indicative test for the wave of populism rising over Europe, allaying markets that have become anxious over a rising support for the anti-EU establishment politicians.
The gap or spread between German and French bond yields, has now fallen to 41.7 bps from a peak of 78 bps in February. Traders are also now looking forward to the wave of economic data
News are provided byInstaForex.