(Bloomberg) -- U.S. Treasuries were little changed,
following a six-week rout, before a government report today that
will probably show faster inflation.
The 10-year Treasury note's yield gained 1 basis point to
5.21 percent. The yield is 13 basis points more than on two-year
government debt, compared with a spread of 1 basis point a week
ago. The Labor Department will probably say producer prices
excluding food and energy costs rose in May from a month before,
after being unchanged in April, according to a Bloomberg survey.
Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News
following a six-week rout, before a government report today that
will probably show faster inflation.
The 10-year Treasury note's yield gained 1 basis point to
5.21 percent. The yield is 13 basis points more than on two-year
government debt, compared with a spread of 1 basis point a week
ago. The Labor Department will probably say producer prices
excluding food and energy costs rose in May from a month before,
after being unchanged in April, according to a Bloomberg survey.
Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News
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