Much like the week before last, we're seeing an abundance of new "supply" hitting the bond market.  This comes both in the form of the scheduled Treasury auctions as well as the more fluid world of corporate bond issuance.  Traders generally have a good idea of which firms will be issuing debt, but the exact dates, times, and amounts are often up in the air.  In any event, they're nowhere near as rigid and specific as the Treasury auction calendar.

For fixed-income markets, all supply has an impact.  Granted, certain types of supply will affect part of the bond market more than another, but any time the supply of anything is increasing, there will be general downward pressure on prices--all other things being equal.  Lower prices = higher rates when it comes to bonds.

Today's corporate supply was a bit bigger than expected, which didn't help a bond market that was already feeling unsure about its next move.  The 2yr Treasury auction was strong enough to help stop the bleeding for the day, but political headlines caused renewed selling pressure in the afternoon (White House announcing that today's congressional hearing found no evidence of collusion with Russia during election).

Ultimately, 10yr yields broke up and out of the narrow range they'd been holding over the past 3 days, but continue to trade under the important 2.305% pivot point.