10-Year Treasury Daily Close Time and Price
10-Year Treasury's daily close follows the relevant market session and provider previous close reference.
Traditional assets can be affected by exchange hours, weekends, holidays, and after-hours movement. DailyClose shows current price, provider previous close, and session context while keeping methodology caveats visible.
10-Year Treasury is currently trading at $4.47. The previous daily close shown on this page is $4.46. The current price is above the previous daily close by more than 0.1%. The session state is determined by comparing the current price to the provider previous close. A bullish session indicates the price is above the previous close, a bearish session indicates it is below, and a flat session indicates minimal change within 0.1%. See our methodology for the current data-provider caveat.
10-Year Treasury daily close context
The 10-Year Treasury Yield is the 'risk-free' rate. When yields spike, liquidity often drains from risk assets like Crypto and Tech stocks. The yield shown here is sourced directly from the U.S. Treasury rates feed.
10-Year Treasury market close meaning
For non-crypto assets, the daily close usually refers to a completed market session or provider previous close field. The exact definition can vary by exchange, instrument, and data convention.
Timezone and session caveats
US equities commonly use Eastern Time market hours, while commodities, Treasury proxies, volatility indexes, and currency proxies can follow different session or settlement conventions.
Weekends, holidays, and after-hours prices
Traditional markets can close on weekends and holidays. After-hours moves may not count as the regular-session close, so DailyClose treats provider previous close values as reference data.
How DailyClose calculates this page
DailyClose compares current price with the provider previous close to label the current session as bullish, bearish, or flat. See the methodology for the current provider caveat and data verification roadmap.
10-Year Treasury Daily Close FAQ
What does the 10-Year Treasury daily close mean?
10-Year Treasury daily close refers to the prior completed market close reference returned by the data provider. The exact market session can depend on the asset, exchange, and data convention.
What timezone matters for 10-Year Treasury?
For US stocks and many market proxies, Eastern Time is the most relevant market-hours timezone. Some commodities, indexes, and macro proxies may use different session or settlement conventions.
Do weekends or holidays affect the 10-Year Treasury close?
Yes. Traditional markets can close on weekends and market holidays, so the previous close may remain unchanged until the next completed trading session.
Do after-hours moves count as the 10-Year Treasury daily close?
Usually not for regular-session stock closes. After-hours moves can differ from the prior regular close, and DailyClose treats provider previous close values as reference data.
Where does DailyClose get the previous close?
The current app shows previous close values returned by the configured market data provider. A later data phase should verify asset-specific candle and session close history.