(Bloomberg) -- Japanese government bonds fell after
a report showed U.S. factory orders declined less than forecast,
easing concerns that export growth will slow.
Ten-year yields rose from near the lowest in a month after
benchmark Treasury yields climbed above 5 percent on speculation
U.S. manufacturing will help overcome the housing slump.
Confidence in Japan's economy was also bolstered after Moody's
Investors Service put the nation's debt rating on review for
upgrade, citing a ``sustained improvement'' in growth.
Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News
a report showed U.S. factory orders declined less than forecast,
easing concerns that export growth will slow.
Ten-year yields rose from near the lowest in a month after
benchmark Treasury yields climbed above 5 percent on speculation
U.S. manufacturing will help overcome the housing slump.
Confidence in Japan's economy was also bolstered after Moody's
Investors Service put the nation's debt rating on review for
upgrade, citing a ``sustained improvement'' in growth.
Read more at Bloomberg Bonds News
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