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The Daily Insight

What is the 10 year US Treasury bond rate?

Author

Henry Morales

Published Feb 19, 2026

Treasury Yields

NameCouponYield
GT2:GOV 2 Year0.130.17%
GT5:GOV 5 Year0.630.65%
GT10:GOV 10 Year1.631.17%
GT30:GOV 30 Year2.381.84%

What was the 10 year treasury in 2008?

10 Year Treasury Rate – 54 Year Historical Chart

10-Year Treasury – Historical Annual Yield Data
YearAverage YieldYear Close
20083.66%2.25%
20074.63%4.04%
20064.80%4.71%

What is the Australian 10 year bond rate?

Australia Government Bonds

Residual MaturityYield
10 years1.185%
12 years1.242%
15 years1.590%
20 years1.876%

What is a 10-year bond yield?

The 10-year yield is used as a proxy for mortgage rates. It’s also seen as a sign of investor sentiment about the economy. A rising yield indicates falling demand for Treasury bonds, which means investors prefer higher-risk, higher-reward investments. A falling yield suggests the opposite.

Why are US Treasury bonds so low?

10-year Treasury yield drops to lowest level since February amid signs of economic growth slowing. The 10-year Treasury yield fell to its lowest level since February on Tuesday amid signs that the economic recovery from the pandemic could be slowing. The note hit a low of 1.351% at one point, its lowest level since Feb …

Why are Treasury bond yields so low?

During periods of economic expansion, bond prices and the stock market move in opposite directions because they are competing for capital. Selling in the stock market leads to higher bond prices and lower yields as money moves into the bond market.

How does a 10-year Treasury bond work?

The 10-year Treasury note is a debt obligation issued by the United States government with a maturity of 10 years upon initial issuance. A 10-year Treasury note pays interest at a fixed rate once every six months and pays the face value to the holder at maturity.

What happens when Treasury yields fall?

When the Treasury yield falls, lending rates for consumers and businesses also fall. If the demand for Treasuries is low, the Treasury yield increases to compensate for the lower demand. When demand is low, investors are only willing to pay an amount below par value.