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Treasuries rose Friday after New York Federal Reserve President William Dudley said "a couple" more interest-rate increases this year "seems reasonable" and that there's no "great urgency" to tighten monetary policy.

Yields were lower by two to four basis points at 3:15 p.m. in New York. Spurred in early U.S. trading by Dudley's comments on Bloomberg Television, the advance continued over the course of the session, pushing yields to session lows as month-end index rebalancing took effect.

The yield curve from five to 30 years retraced about half of its initial steepening.

• Month-end flows included foreign and domestic real-money buying in belly of the curve and domestic real-money buying in 10s out to long-end, as well as in front-end; in futures, volumes surged in the five minutes before 3pm ET

• 5s30s curve steepening after Dudley's comments was aided by 10k block trade in 5-year note futures; comments appeared to spark a volume surge in front-end eurodollar futures

• JPMorgan recommended 7s30s steepener ahead of the next 30-year bond auction on April 12

• Month- and quarter-end were expected to provide support; duration extension estimate for Bloomberg Barclays Treasury Index was 0.07yr vs 0.05yr historical average for March, and stocks outperformed bonds during 1Q, suggesting that funds will re-balance in favor of bonds

• Among other bullish factors, March 31 end of Japanese fiscal year may clear the decks for rebound in buying of foreign bonds next week; also, April employment report has "a strong bias to disappoint," BMO strategists said

• Treasuries held gains even as March Chicago PMI rose unexpectedly while 5-10 year inflation expectation in University of Michigan's Consumer Sentiment survey for March was revised to 2.4%, lowest since December, from an initial 2.2%, which would have been a generational low

• Treasuries faced bearish pressure from the view, expressed in notes by BofA and SocGen, that the market is assigning too-low odds to tax cuts and other pro-growth Trump administration goals

• UST yields are little changed over the month; declines into Fed's March 15 interest-rate increase were erased as the Trump administration's fiscal agenda was imperiled by failure to win congressional approval for health-care reform.