News Results

  1. Rocket Companies Stock Falls As Rising Yields Pressure Mortgage Demand
    Benzinga | 03/03/26 11:44 AM EST

    Rocket Companies Inc (RKT) stock is trading lower Tuesday morning as rising U.S. Treasury yields spark fresh concerns about mortgage costs and housing demand in the wake of the company's recent earnings report. The 10-year Treasury yield briefly touched about 4.1% early Tuesday before easing back toward the 4.05% area ahead of noon ET, extending last week's volatility.

  2. Mitsubishi UFG Sees Further Gains in Mexico's Peso, Although Middle East Conflict Poses Risk
    MT Newswires | 03/03/26 11:35 AM EST

    In February, the Mexican peso strengthened modestly further from 17.327 to 17.202, said Mitsubishi UFG, Mexico's central bank at its meeting in February left the key policy rate unchanged at 7.00%. Banxico cut by a total of 300 basis points last year, with cuts on seven separate occasions.

  3. Paramount credit ratings downgraded by Fitch after Warner Bros deal
    Reuters | 03/03/26 11:15 AM EST

    Credit rating agency Fitch Ratings downgraded Paramount Skydance (PSKY) and Paramount Global's ratings to junk status late on Monday following the media company's proposed acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery (WBD). In a Monday note, Fitch analysts said they expect Los Angeles-based Paramount to carry "materially elevated leverage" following its successful acquisition of Warner Bros Discovery.

  4. Florida International University upgraded to AA by Fitch
    SourceMedia Bond Buyer | 03/03/26 11:13 AM EST

    The agency cited strong student demand as a factor of its uprade to the FIU's issuer default rating.

  5. Bond markets dominated by inflation fear, prompting rate-cut bets to fall
    Reuters | 03/03/26 11:11 AM EST

    * British, German 2-year yields set for biggest two-day jump in many months. * Jump in oil and gas prices fans inflation worries. * Traders cut bets on BoE easing this month. * Price in a small chance of ECB rate hike by year-end. By Alun John and Yoruk Bahceli.

  6. TREASURIES-US yields climb for second straight session as oil surge continues
    Reuters | 03/03/26 11:06 AM EST

    * Iran conflict sends oil prices higher. * Fed rate cut expectations drop as inflation concerns rise. By Chuck Mikolajczak. U.S. Treasury yields rose sharply for a second straight session on Tuesday, as the Iran war entered a fourth day to continue pushing oil prices higher and fuel inflation worries.

  7. Last year, small US firms faced notable tariff price pressures, Fed report finds
    Reuters | 03/03/26 11:05 AM EST

    President Donald Trump's regime of large-scale tax increases on imports as well as generalized inflation gains created headwinds for U.S. small businesses last year, a Federal Reserve report released on Tuesday said.

  8. MUFG Sees Canadian Dollar Underperforming as Estimates Energy Price Spike Reversal
    MT Newswires | 03/03/26 10:41 AM EST

    In February, the Canadian dollar weakened against the US dollar in terms of London closing rates from 1.3560 to 1.3637, said MUFG. The Bank of Canada did not meet in February and, as such, the key policy rate was unchanged at 2.25%, following total easing now of 275bps in the current cycle.

  9. Fed's Schmid: inflation too hot, no room to be complacent
    Reuters | 03/03/26 10:09 AM EST

    Kansas City Federal Reserve President Jeffrey Schmid on Tuesday signaled his continued opposition to further interest-rate cuts, saying the U.S. labor market is in balance and inflation is too hot.

  10. Fed's Williams says rate cuts still possible, does not address Iran war
    Reuters | 03/03/26 09:57 AM EST

    New York Federal Reserve President John Williams said on Tuesday the U.S. central bank is on track for more interest rate cuts if inflation pressures moderate as he expects, but he did not address the impact of the Iran conflict on the economy.

In general the bond market is volatile, and fixed income securities carry interest rate risk. (As interest rates rise, bond prices usually fall, and vice versa. This effect is usually more pronounced for longer-term securities.) Fixed income securities also carry inflation risk and credit and default risks for both issuers and counterparties. Unlike individual bonds, most bond funds do not have a maturity date, so avoiding losses caused by price volatility by holding them until maturity is not possible.

Lower-quality debt securities generally offer higher yields, but also involve greater risk of default or price changes due to potential changes in the credit quality of the issuer. Any fixed income security sold or redeemed prior to maturity may be subject to loss.

Before investing, consider the funds' investment objectives, risks, charges, and expenses. Contact Fidelity for a prospectus or, if available, a summary prospectus containing this information. Read it carefully.

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