Investors Can't Get Enough of Treasury Bonds, ETFs | Page 2 of 2 | ETF Trends

Moreover, the declining yields in overseas government bonds has also helped bolster foreign demand for higher yielding U.S. Treasuries. For instance, yields on benchmark 10-year German bunds were at 0.20% and 10-year Japanese Government Bonds were at 0.00%. A EPFR Global report also revealed that investors ditched European debt in favor of U.S. fixed-income asset sin the week ended February 17 due to the higher yields, Bloomberg reports.

The rising demand for U.S. government debt has helped push yields down. Yields on benchmark 10-year Treasury bonds were hovering around 1.748% Friday, compared to 2.273% at the end of 2015, and briefly traded near historical lows last week.

Looking ahead, many traders caution against placing large negative bets against the bond market in an environment of low growth and rising volatility. The yield premium between 10-year notes and two-year notes fell to 1 percentage point Friday, the Wall Street Journal reports.

The lower yield premium or flattening yield curve may be a warning sign of slower growth and inflation ahead. The premium has fallen negative prior to a recession before during the summer of 2007 and December 2000.

Max Chen contributed to this article.