Long-term Treasuries this week have suffered heavy losses, with the 10-year benchmark bond yield up 17 bps while 30-year yields surged 22 bps, the biggest weekly rise in more than a year.
Disappointing results from a 30-year bond auction on Thursday were also partly to blame but the climb in yields largely reflects an upward repricing of terminal rates. U.S. rates are seen falling only slowly to 3.8% by the end of 2025, compared with 1.75% for Europe and 2.7% for Canada.
In Asia, most stocks are down, with China leading the losses.
Hopes had been high for China's Central Economic Work Conference in Beijing after a Politburo meeting changed the stance of monetary policy to "moderately loose", the first such change in 14 years, but nothing specific emerged.
Europe is set for a lower open ahead of some secondary economic data, including UK monthly GDP and euro zone industrial production. EUROSTOXX 50 futures were 0.3% lower, while Nasdaq futures rose 0.3%, near a record high.
Several ECB officials will be speaking later in the day. The central bank, which disappointed doves that had been hoping for a 50 bp move on Thursday, is expected to cut by a quarter-point at each of its policy meetings until the middle of next year.
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