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As the week winds down, US bond yields are rising and the dollar is falling.

As a turbulent week came to an end, U.S. Treasury rates rose to their highest level in two months on Friday. The 10-year rate was also on course for its biggest weekly rise in decades.

U.S. indexes rose by more than 1%. Bank shares also increased following a string of positive earnings. Susan Collins, the Boston Federal Reserve president, also gave assurances that the Fed was prepared to maintain financial markets if necessary.

Gold prices reached another record after Beijing raised its tariffs against U.S. goods to 125% in response to President Donald Trump's decision.

Since Trump announced his sweeping tariffs in April, the markets have been shook by fears of recession and a global trade war. Tim Ghriskey is a senior portfolio strategist with Ingalls & Snyder, New York. He said that Trump continues to dominate headlines and financial markets as we enter this period of negotiating new tariffs.

He said that there would be a lot of rumors.

Investors digested two reports: one showing that the U.S. consumer's sentiment declined sharply in April, and another showing that U.S. producer prices fell unexpectedly in March.

The results of some major Wall Street banks were also examined, as they kicked off U.S. quarterly reporting. JPMorgan Chase and Morgan Stanley were among those who released reports. The majority of them showed that major U.S. Banks beat their forecasts for the quarter. JPMorgan shares rose 4.6%.

Investors remain nervous over further bond market liquidity amid Trump's unpredictable tariff policy.

Last week, the 10-year yield increased by 10.3 basis points to 4.495%. It has now reached its highest level since February 13th. The weekly increase is set to be the biggest since 2001.

Analysts say hedge funds and asset managers sold bonds this week, after they received margin calls and suffered sharp losses due to market volatility.

The strong auctions of 30-year and 10-year debt held on Wednesday and Thursday stabilized the market, but investors are still hesitant to buy bonds until liquidity improves.

The yields on euro zone bonds had eased earlier, and the premium demanded by holders of Treasuries to hold U.S. bond rather than German bunds, rose the most since the 1990s.

Investors will be looking to see if U.S. firms continue to provide guidance during earnings.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average increased by 648.65, or 1.6%, to reach 40,242.31. The S&P 500 gained 93.70, or 1.8%, to reach 5,361.75 while the Nasdaq Composite grew 312.92, or 1.59%, to 16,700.23.

The MSCI index of global stocks rose by 11.55 points or 1.48% to 790.82. The pan-European STOXX 600 ended the day down 0.1%.

The dollar continued to lose against the Swiss Franc, falling to its lowest level since January 2015. The dollar fell 0.72% against the Swiss Franc to 0.817. Dollar also fell to a three-year-low versus euro.

Gold spot was up 2% to $3,236.67 per ounce after reaching a session high of $3.243.82. Bullion has risen over 6% in the last week.

Oil prices climbed. Brent crude futures settled on $64.76 per barrel, an increase of $1.43 or 2.26%. U.S. West Texas Intermediate finished at $61.50 per barrel, an increase of $1.43 (or 2.38%). Reporting by Caroline Valetkevitch and Amanda Cooper, both in New York; editing by Nia and Rod Nickel.

(source: Reuters)