Weekly Fixed Income Update
Interest rates, inflation, central bank action—all these and more can impact fixed income. Stay on top of the market with our weekly update.
June 10, 2025
Macro update
The US Court of International Trade ruled against International Emergency Economic Powers Act–based tariffs. The market impact has been muted as the administration appeals the decision and could opt to use other sections of federal law to enforce tariffs.
First-quarter GDP was revised higher to -.2% from -.4%, but underlying details were weaker, supporting rates as the 10-year Treasury declined seven basis points (bps) to 4.44%. Consumption was revised lower from 1.8% annualized to 1.2%, offset by higher inventories.
The data highlight of the week was Friday’s payroll report for May. Nonfarm payrolls increased to 139,000, and the prior two months had downward revisions totaling 95,000. The unemployment rate is unchanged at 4.2%. Wage growth expanded and showed growth in service sectors. There were signs of weakness in industries with tariff exposure.
The report also showed an increase in individuals going from employed status to unemployed, causing concerns regarding how current economic policies could affect employment. This caused September rated cut odds to decrease from 60% to 50%.
May 30, 2025
Fixed income portfolio manager Kevin Lynyak shares his insights into the current bond market. Listen now:
Municipal bond update
Benchmark AAA municipal yields were mixed at week’s end. Two-, five-, and 10 -year yields declined three, three, and one bp, respectively, while 30-year yields rose two bps (LSEG MMD, 6/6/2025).
Muni relative value compared with the 10-year Treasury increased slightly to 76% by Friday’s close and remains sharply higher than the two-year average of 66% (LSEG MMD, 5/30/2025).
Five- to 15-year A-rated municipal yields ranged from 3% to 4.29%, with related taxable-equivalent yields ranging from 5.06% to 7.25%, assuming a combined federal tax rate of 40.8% (LSEG MMD, Parametric, 5/30/2025).
Mutual funds experienced a sixth consecutive week of inflows, at $426 million, coming from open-end funds only. Muni ETFS showed modest outflows (-$145 million ) after seven weeks of inflows (LSEG Lipper, JPMorgan 6/6/2025).
Last week’s record $18 billion new issue calendar was digested well in the market, with minimal secondary balances around. This week we expect about $15.6 billion in supply, comforted that the summer reinvestment season is upon us (Bloomberg, JPMorgan 6/6/2025).
Corporate bond update
US investment-grade (IG) corporate yields increased across the curve last week. Two-, five- and 10-year yields rose nine, 11, and eight bps, respectively. Corporate yields are mixed across the curve year to date (YTD). Two- and five-year yields are down 12 bps each, and 10-year yields are unchanged (Bloomberg, 6/6/2025).
The ICE BofA 1–10 Year US Corporate Index returned -0.27% for the week and month to date (MTD). The index outperformed like-duration Treasurys by 0.26% during the week and MTD (Bloomberg, 6/6/2025).
IG mutual funds and ETFs experienced inflows of $4.9 billion, an increase from the previous week’s inflows of $3.8 billion. Corporate-only funds experienced outflows of $1.9 billion, following the previous week’s inflows of $1 billion (JPMorgan, 6/6/2025).
Corporate one- to 10-year IG bond yields have decreased 13 bps YTD and ended last week at 5% (Bloomberg, 6/6/2025).
Investing in fixed income securities involves risk. All investments are subject to loss. Learn more.

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