TREASURIES-Prices rise on weak business, employment data
* Treasuries prices rise on weak economic data
* ISM non-manufacturing index slides; ADP employment falls
* Steep Nov job losses expected in Labor Dept data Friday
* Benchmark yields hover above lows not seen since 1955 (Updates prices, changes byline)
By Ellen Freilich
NEW YORK, Dec 3 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasuries prices rose on Wednesday, keeping benchmark yields near lows not seen since 1955, as more news of weakness in the service sector and labor market sustained the bid for safe-haven government debt even as stocks made notable gains.
A report showed U.S. private employers cut 250,000 jobs in November, suggesting that the government's more comprehensive non-farm payrolls report for November on Friday could show job losses reaching 400,000, analysts said.
The Institute for Supply Management (ISM) non-manufacturing business activity index plunged to a record low in November.
"The composite business activity index was low, but the 8.6 percent drop month over month in new orders didn't give us much hope going forward either," said Anthony Nieves, chair of the ISM non-manufacturing business survey committee.
Concern about potentially sharp job losses in the Labor Department's employment report due this Friday kept investors from taking profits in Treasuries, even though Treasuries prices have rallied and yields, which move inversely to prices, are at their lowest levels in more than five decades.
"The economic data today were so weak that the 'whisper number' for November non-farm job losses is now 400,000 instead of 325,000, so people who might normally be selling Treasuries are hesitating to do so," said Josh Stiles, senior bond strategist at IDEAglobal.
"Treasuries are extremely overbought so a big correction should be coming, but it's all a matter of timing," he said.
One factor that could have encouraged some selling in Treasuries is that stocks scored gains for the second day in a row. The gains, however, did not make up for the equity market's dramatic retreat on Monday.
"If stocks get to the point where they have erased Monday's loss, that would be more likely to trigger some pullback in Treasuries," Stiles said.
The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note US10YT=RR rose 9/32, its yield easing to 2.67 percent from 2.70 percent late on Tuesday. On Monday, that yield fell as low as 2.65 percent, the lowest in over five decades, as stocks tumbled.
The two-year Treasury note US2YT=RR finished unchanged, yielding 0.90 percent, still below the Federal Reserve's target rate for overnight lending between banks of 1 percent. Continued...
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