(Bloomberg) — US Treasuries fell after stronger-than-expected US employment data showed tariff uncertainty hasn’t hit the nation’s jobs market yet, prompting traders to trim bets on imminent interest-rate cuts.

Most Read from Bloomberg

The declines on Friday pushed yields on two- to five-year notes higher by more than 10 basis points after non-farm payrolls rose 177,000, above all estimates compiled by Bloomberg. Traders pulled back on bets for Federal Reserve rate reductions, pricing in 79 basis points of total easing this year, compared to around 90 basis points before the report.

Traders pared their expectations for a rate cut in the coming months, only pricing in the next move in the second half of the year. Economists at Goldman Sachs and Barclays pushed back their forecasts for the Fed to lower its benchmark to July, rather than June, after the data.

The Fed is “going to have to wait until they see any kind of impact in terms of a rise in the unemployment rate,” Jeffrey Rosenberg, a portfolio manager at BlackRock Inc., said on Bloomberg Television. “None of this data reflects the impact of the shock, and we will have to see that data show up.”

Two-year yields are on course for their largest two-day rise since October as investors rethink bets that President Donald Trump’s tariffs will quickly slow the world’s largest economy. On Thursday, bonds fell after a manufacturing survey came in stronger than anticipated.

For investors, it’s a question of how to weigh the economic pessimism that has been seen in some recent surveys against the resilience in top-tier measures of employment such as Friday’s jobs report. US consumer confidence fell in April to an almost five-year low.

Traders in the futures and options markets trimmed back their expectations for the Fed, fully pricing in only three quarter-point rate cuts before the end of 2025, versus four earlier in the week. Only 24 basis points of easing are priced in for July, just shy of a full quarter-point cut. There’s about 46 basis points of cumulative easing priced in by September.

One popular trade has emerged that stands to benefit should the Fed refrain from cutting rates at all this year. That position was bought again in the lead-up to the employment report.