US 30-Year Yield Falls Most Since March as Investors Lured Back
Browbeaten long-bond investors got some relief on Tuesday as a global debt rally sent benchmark yields tumbling.
Investors were lured to long-maturity bonds for the first time in weeks, offsetting — if only for a day — a selloff sparked by a deteriorating fiscal outlook and simmering tariff tensions. Thirty-year Treasury yields posted the biggest one-day slide since late March, following news on Tuesday that Japanese authorities may adjust debt sales following a market rout. Solid demand for a $69 billion sale of two-year Treasuries added to the advance in the US.