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US Treasury Bond Prices Today (Dec 17, 2025): Yields Edge Higher With CPI Looming and Fed Liquidity Moves in Focus
17 December 2025
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US Treasury Bond Prices Today (Dec 17, 2025): Yields Edge Higher With CPI Looming and Fed Liquidity Moves in Focus

NEW YORK, Dec. 17, 2025 — U.S. Treasury bond prices are slightly lower today, nudging yields modestly higher across key maturities as investors position for a pivotal inflation update due Thursday and digest fresh signals about liquidity conditions into year-end. In early trading, benchmark yields hovered near recent highs: the 10-year Treasury yield sat around 4.17% and the 2-year yield held near 3.51%, reflecting a market that’s still debating how quickly the Federal Reserve can cut rates in 2026.

The backdrop is unusually complicated: delayed U.S. economic data releases following recent shutdown-related disruptions, rising geopolitical noise that has pushed oil higher, and a Fed that is trying to smooth short-term funding pressures with renewed Treasury bill purchases—moves that can ripple from money markets into the broader Treasury curve.

Treasury yields today: Where the market stands on Dec. 17

Because Treasury prices move inversely to yields, today’s uptick in yields translates to a small decline in prices—more of a “marking time” move than a decisive trend break, but notable given what’s ahead on the calendar.

Here’s the snapshot from widely followed market pricing early Wednesday:

  • 10-year Treasury yield: about 4.17%
  • 2-year Treasury yield: about 3.51%
  • 30-year Treasury yield: near 4.83%
  • 20-year Treasury yield: near 4.80%

For perspective, the U.S. Treasury’s official par yield curve data (based on end‑of‑day indicative market quotes) showed Tuesday’s 10-year at 4.15% and 2-year at 3.48%—underscoring that today’s move is a modest backup in yields rather than a major selloff.

What’s driving Treasury bond prices today

1) All eyes on Thursday’s CPI release (and markets know it)

The biggest near-term catalyst is the next U.S. inflation report. The BLS schedule shows the CPI release set for Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025, at 8:30 a.m. ET.

This isn’t just another CPI print. Markets have been navigating data gaps and timing disruptions tied to the shutdown period, which has made “soft landing vs. sticky inflation” debates harder to settle with confidence. Reuters has also highlighted that delayed U.S. releases can come with missing details, complicating clean comparisons to prior months. Reuters

Why it matters for Treasuries:

  • A hotter-than-expected CPI typically pushes yields up (prices down) as traders price fewer (or later) Fed cuts.
  • A cooler CPI can revive rate-cut expectations, pulling yields down (prices up), especially in the 2-year and 5-year sector.

2) The labor market signal is mixed—and credibility is part of the story

A key reason the bond market is so sensitive to CPI right now is that the latest jobs data, while pointing to cooling, has been clouded by shutdown effects.

Recent reporting flagged a rise in the U.S. unemployment rate to 4.6%, the highest level in years, even as headline payroll changes were affected by government employment swings.

That combination tends to support Treasuries on “growth is slowing” logic—unless inflation stays firm, which is why Thursday’s CPI has become the next major “tiebreaker.”

3) Oil and geopolitics are back in the inflation conversation

Treasury traders don’t price oil directly, but they do price what oil can do to inflation expectations.

On Dec. 17, global markets reacted to news around a U.S. move targeting sanctioned Venezuelan oil tankers, which contributed to an uptick in crude prices and a broader risk-sensitive repositioning.

If energy prices remain elevated, that can make it harder for longer-dated yields (10s and 30s) to fall sustainably, even if growth slows.

The Fed factor: “Pause” messaging vs. what traders are pricing for 2026

Treasury pricing right now reflects a tug-of-war:

  • The Fed has recently cut rates and signaled a higher bar for additional near-term cuts.
  • Interest-rate futures and market commentary have leaned toward a January pause, even if traders still see room for easing later in 2026.

This matters because the 2-year note is essentially the market’s “Fed expectations barometer.” When investors lean toward “pause,” the front end can stabilize or even rise, while the long end trades more on inflation expectations, deficit/supply concerns, and term premium.

Year-end liquidity is unusually central to the bond story this week

One of the more important Treasury-market developments dated Dec. 17 isn’t a yield print—it’s plumbing.

Reuters reported that Federal Reserve liquidity measures have helped calm year-end funding jitters, with repo conditions improving after the Fed outlined steps including about $40 billion per month in short-dated Treasury bill purchases, plus reinvestments from maturing holdings.

Why this is relevant for Treasury prices today:

  • When repo and money-market conditions look stable, forced selling risk tends to diminish.
  • Bill buying can indirectly support demand for short-dated Treasuries and help keep front-end funding markets orderly—important going into quarter-end and year-end balance sheet dates.

The takeaway: even if longer-term yields remain sensitive to CPI and geopolitics, the market’s “stress premium” around year-end funding appears lower than many feared.

Treasury supply watch: The 20-year auction is on the radar

Even in a CPI week, supply still matters—especially in maturities that can be less liquid or more sentiment-driven.

A 20-year Treasury bond auction is scheduled for Dec. 17, 2025, with $13 billion offered, per CME/Econoday auction details.

Investors have a fresh reference point for this tenor: the most recent 20-year auction results (Nov. 19, 2025) showed a high yield of 4.706% on the 20-year bond (CUSIP 912810UQ9).

Why traders care: auction demand can influence the long end (especially 20s/30s) on the day, and weak demand can push yields higher quickly—even if macro data is quiet.

A major real-money demand theme: Big banks shifting into Treasuries

One of the most striking Treasury demand stories published today centers on bank behavior.

The Financial Times reported that JPMorgan has pulled roughly $350 billion from its Federal Reserve account since 2023 and invested much of it into U.S. Treasuries, effectively shifting from floating-rate interest on reserves toward locking in yields ahead of potential rate cuts.

For the Treasury market, this is meaningful because:

  • It highlights continued structural demand for government bonds from systemically important balance sheets.
  • It supports the idea that, even with heavy Treasury issuance over time, there are still large buyers willing to extend into duration when yields are attractive.

Forecasts and strategist views: Where yields could go next

Forecasting Treasuries is always conditional, but several widely cited themes are shaping late‑2025 and early‑2026 outlooks:

Reuters poll view: modest upward pressure on the 10-year without inflation surprises

A Reuters poll published in November suggested that, assuming no upside inflation surprises, 10-year yields could rise modestly in coming months, while shorter maturities could soften if rate-cut expectations build.

That framework aligns with what the curve is signaling now: the long end remains sensitive to inflation risk and term premium, while the front end is tethered to the Fed’s pace.

“Rates could still go up” is a non-consensus risk for 2026

Reuters’ Breakingviews commentary has emphasized a left‑field risk: even with cuts penciled in, the combination of inflation uncertainty and policy debate can leave room for higher-than-expected rates in 2026.

More data, less certainty

A Bloomberg-distributed analysis (via Yahoo Finance and Bloomberg Law) highlighted that incoming delayed employment and inflation data will help answer whether the Fed is nearing the end of easing—or has more work to do into 2026.

What to watch next (and what it could mean for Treasury bond prices)

Thursday, Dec. 18: CPI is the near-term trigger

The CPI release time is set for 8:30 a.m. ET.

A practical way many fixed-income desks frame it:

  • Hot CPI: 2-year yields often react first (prices fall), then 10s/30s if inflation expectations move.
  • Cool CPI: front-end yields can drop quickly, and the 10-year often follows if the market starts pricing a clearer easing path.

Yield curve check: still positive slope recently

The 10-year minus 2-year spread most recently printed around +0.67 percentage point (using the latest posted data), a sign the curve has remained out of inversion—often interpreted as the market leaning toward slower growth ahead but not necessarily an imminent hard landing.

Bottom line: Treasury prices are cautious today—because the next 24 hours matter more than the last 24 hours

U.S. Treasury bond prices today reflect a market that’s not panicking, but not complacent either. Yields have edged higher—10-year near 4.17% and 2-year near 3.51%—as investors wait for a high-stakes CPI release, monitor year-end funding conditions, and weigh the Fed’s “pause” posture against a still‑debated 2026 path. MarketWatch+2Morningstar+2

If Thursday’s inflation data cools meaningfully, Treasuries could rally fast. If inflation proves sticky—or oil-driven pressures seep into expectations—the market may demand higher compensation for holding duration, keeping Treasury prices under pressure into year-end.

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