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14:31
U.S. Treasury yields rise across the board as market expects fewer rate cuts
ChainCatcher news, according to Golden Ten Data, US Treasury yields continue to rise due to inflation concerns triggered by the Middle East conflict and signs of a robust US labor market. Data shows that employers are still reluctant to lay off workers, with weekly initial jobless claims remaining steady at 213,000. In addition, the import price index for January increased by 0.2%, lower than expected. The market expects that the non-farm payrolls to be announced tomorrow for February will slow down to 50,000 from 130,000 in January. The futures market currently mostly expects the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates only once in 2026, lower than the three cuts anticipated earlier this year. The yield on the 10-year US Treasury is currently reported at 4.134%, higher than yesterday's 4.081%; the yield on the two-year US Treasury has risen from 3.541% to 3.586%.
14:29
Gerdes Energy Research Institute recently released a research report, including Solaris Energy Infrastructure Company in its coverage for the first time and assigning a "Buy" rating.
The institution has set a target price of $60 for this company specializing in energy infrastructure, indicating a positive outlook on its future growth potential.
14:29
World Gold Council: Global gold ETF net inflows reached $5.3 billion in February
Jinse Finance reported that the World Gold Council stated: In February, global gold ETFs saw a net inflow of $5.3 billions, marking the ninth consecutive month of capital inflows and the strongest annual start on record. Due to the continuous rise in gold prices boosting valuations, the global gold assets under management (AUM) climbed to a historic high of $701 billions, with global holdings reaching 4,171 tons. North America and Asia were the main drivers of capital inflows, while Europe experienced outflows at the beginning of the month due to a sell-off in late January. The global average daily trading volume dropped to $478 billions, but remained significantly higher than the levels in 2025.
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