US Treasuries ended the quarter not too far from where they started in March but did gain ground across the curve. The 2-year yield declined by two basis points to close at 4.62%, while the 10-year yield fell by five basis points to 4.20%. The probability of the first rate cut in June is now 64%.
Oil prices continued to advance, increasing by $2.34 this week and by $4.72, or 6% for the month, to close at $82.99 a barrel. Gold prices increased by 9% or $185.30 to close at $2239.40 an Oz. Copper prices rallied 4.1% for the month on the announcement that China would curb smelting. The US dollar index gained 0.3% for the month, with outsized gains against the Japanese yen, while the Chinese Yuan was weaker against the US dollar.
Friday’s PCE print highlighted economic data for the week. The headline number was 0.3%, below the estimate of 0.4%. On a year-over-year basis, headline PCE increased in February to 2.5% from 2.4% in January. Core PCE, which excludes food and energy, came in as expected at 0.3% and grew at 2.8% annually, slightly lower than the 2.9% reading in January. Personal Spending for February was stronger than expected at 0.4%, while Personal Income came in a bit weaker than anticipated at 0.3%. Consumer confidence was weaker than expected, coming in at 104.7 versus the estimated 106.7. Interestingly, the final reading of the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment increased to 79.4 versus the February reading of 76.9, predicated on lower inflation expectations. The third look at 4thquarter GDP ticked to 3.4% from 3.2% while the GDP deflator stayed at 1.6%. Initial Claims decreased by 2k this week to 210k, while Continuing Claims increased by 24k to 1.819M.
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