U.S. Treasury yields have fallen, and market focus has shifted from inflation to growth risks.

Gate News reports that on March 30, despite rising oil prices, U.S. Treasury yields (a measure of bond investment returns) fell during the Asian trading session as bond investors gradually shifted their attention from inflation fears sparked by the Middle East conflict to growth risks. Elmar Voelker, a senior fixed income analyst at LBBW, stated in a report that the damage and disruptions suffered by the energy sector so far may continue to have an impact for some time and could spill over into other areas of the economy. The bank expects that compared to previous major scenarios, economies on both sides of the Atlantic will suffer a growth loss of about 0.25 percentage points this year. Tradeweb data shows that the yield on two-year U.S. Treasuries fell by 3.9 basis points (0.01 percentage points) to 3.875%; the yield on ten-year U.S. Treasuries fell by 5.2 basis points to 4.387%.

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