U.S. equity futures slipped lower Tuesday, while Treasury yields and the dollar crept higher, as investors looked to test the market's conviction on peak interest rates ahead of a key three-day stretch for the bond market that includes $112 billion in new sales.
The pullback in Treasury yields those two event triggered helped the interest rate sensitive Nasdaq go on a run of seven consecutive session gains, despite disappointing outlooks from some of its mega-cap constituents, marking the longest winning streak since January. Benchmark 2-year notes bumped 2 basis points higher from Monday levels to change hands at 4.911% in early New York trading, with 10-year notes held at 4.593%, still well south of last week's levels but moving in a direction that could headwinds to stocks for the remainder of the week.
Around $112 billion in 3-year and 10-year notes, as well as 30-year bonds, will be auction this week as part of the Treasury's new funding plans as it cover the maturity of $102.2 billion in Treasury bills on November 15.
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