
The two-year U.S. Treasury yield rose by about 12 basis points during the week of the Federal Reserve's interest rate cut, while the ten-year U.S. Treasury yield fell by about 6 basis points in October
On Friday (October 31), at the New York close, the yield on the U.S. 10-year Treasury bond fell by 0.40 basis points to 4.0930%. This week, it accumulated an increase of 9.23 basis points, with a notable rise on October 29, the day of the Federal Reserve's interest rate cut (Chairman Powell dampened expectations for a rate cut in December). In October, it accumulated a decline of 5.73 basis points, having previously fallen to 3.9342% on October 17.
The yield on the two-year U.S. Treasury bond fell by 1.00 basis point to 3.5983%. This week, it accumulated an increase of 11.83 basis points, with a significant rise on October 29—remaining flat at lower levels before stabilizing at higher levels. In October, it accumulated a decline of 1.01 basis points, having previously fallen to 3.3737% on October 17

