KEY POINTS
  • Morgan Stanley said the rise in 10-year treasury yields is "reasonable" and a reflection of the growing confidence in the U.S economic outlook, according to Jim Caron, global fixed-income portfolio manager at the investment bank.
  • The recent increase in bond yields does not indicate a tightening of financial conditions, according to Caron.
  • Michael Spencer, chief economist and head of research Asia Pacific, at Deutsche Bank, echoed a similar view, stating it is "entirely natural that long bond yields are going up."

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Morgan Stanley said the rise in 10-year Treasury yields is reasonable and a reflection of the growing confidence in the U.S economic outlook, according to Jim Caron, global fixed-income portfolio manager at the investment bank.

The 10-year Treasury yield jumped above 1.7% on Thursday, its highest level in more than a year. It came even though the Federal Reserve reassured investors that it had no plans to hike interest rates anytime soon, nor ease its bond-buying program.

In this article