You may have an interest in current Treasury yields across various issue durations. The most current yield is available to the far right of any line. Hover a pointer there to display the yield, which is auto refreshed at the end of a business day. The time frame is set for one month (21 days) and moves forward in dates (an active graphic). If one chooses to view a different time frame, right click the '21 days' to select from a drop down menu.
The graphic is 'yields', and not for performance or pricing.
UST's, 30 year - 1 month.....a '
yield graphic.
Remain curious,
Catch
Comments
https://www.ustreasuryyieldcurve.com/
Whomever is looking at these graphics and find some value, you all now have a thread to return to, and/or save the sites (2) for future use. They both offer a slightly different view.
In other parts of the curve, the current yields are around 1% higher now at the short end (1.5% higher at 1 mo.) than Jan 2023 and around 1/2% higher at the long end. If one squints just right, that seems to follow the same contour as the yield curve itself.
This might just be another way of saying that the yield curve is flattening, or as you put it, on its way to transitioning from an inverted curve to a normal curve.
ov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/TextView?type=daily_treasury_yield_curve&field_tdr_date_value=2024
Thanks for your charts, Derf