The prospect of a more aggressive policy path forward has been the biggest takeaway for investors following a hectic week of monetary policy meetings across the Group of Seven (G7) nations and others.
After facing criticism they acted too late to tame a post-COVID jump in inflation exacerbated by the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, policymakers are determined to rein in prices without derailing still-patchy economic growth - and above all to avoid a "stagflation" mix of recession and price surges.
Traders now see a 40% chance that the Bank of England could hike next month , while sources said the European Central Bank may need to begin discussing rate increases in April and possibly tighten policy in June.
The hawkish rate repricing has in turn sparked a rout in global bond markets, with short-dated British gilts on Thursday suffering one of their worst days since modern records began, while the two-year U.S. Treasury yield surged more than 20 basis points at one point.
Trading of cash U.S. Treasuries was closed in Asia on Friday due to a holiday in Japan, though futures pointed to abating selling pressure.
Germany's bund futures also edged slightly higher, as did French OAT futures.