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US 2-Year Treasury Note Rates

US 2-Year Treasury Note Rates data, recent 37 years (traceable to Jan 08,1990), the yield unit is %, latest yield value is 3.85, updated at Apr 03,2026

Price

Current: 100.06 USD (-0.078 / -0.078%)

Apr 03,2026

Time Range: Jan 08,1990 ~ Apr 03,2026

Average: 99.94 USD
Median: 99.93 USD
Max: 102.31 USD (Jan 22,2008)
Min: 98.00 USD (Sep 26,2022)

Yield

Current: 3.85 % (+0.041 / +1.083%)

Apr 03,2026

Time Range: Jan 08,1990 ~ Apr 03,2026

Average: 3.20 %
Median: 3.31 %
Max: 9.03 % (Apr 26,1990)
Min: 0.11 % (Feb 05,2021)
Share:

FAQ

Global Government Bond Rates & Historical Data Charts

Track global treasury bond rates with daily historical charts. Access data for US, Germany, Japan, UK, Australia, and China bonds to analyze market trends.

1

Economic implications of 2-year Treasury yield curve inversion?

2-year Treasury yield curve inversion is an important economic warning signal, typically predicting economic recession within 12-18 months. This phenomenon indicates markets expect short-term rates to fall, reflecting pessimistic expectations about economic growth prospects.

2

Relationship between 2-year Treasuries and Fed policy?

2-year Treasury yields are highly correlated with Fed policy and are seen as a barometer of market expectations for Fed policy. When markets expect the Fed to raise rates, 2-year yields rise; when expecting rate cuts, yields fall.

3

Impact of US 2-year Treasury rates on global risk assets?

Changes in US 2-year Treasury rates directly affect global risk asset valuations, with rising yields typically leading to declines in stock and commodity prices. Changes transmit to 1-year Treasuries, 3-year Treasuries and other short-term rates, affecting global portfolio allocation.

4

Policy sensitivity of US 2-year Treasuries vs European major economies' bonds?

US 2-year Treasuries are most sensitive to Fed policy changes, with stronger policy transmission effects compared to German 2-year bonds and UK 2-year bonds. European bonds are affected by unified ECB policies, but economic fundamental differences among countries lead to yield divergence.