Alex Wong/Getty Images Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin isn’t worried about foreign demand.Bond traders are questioning whether foreign demand for U.S. Treasurys will remain robust for the rest of the year, underlining concerns about an important backstop that has helped to keep a lid on yields. Investors will pay close attention to the release Monday of the Treasury International Capital, or TIC, report for February, with analysts looking “for any evidence that overseas investors have shied away from Treasurys as a result of the growing global trade tensions,” said Ian Lyngen and Aaron Kohli, fixed-income strategists at BMO Capital Markets. Treasury yields rose to multiyear highs in February after fears of wage inflation sent bond prices lower, with the 10-year Treasury note yield hitting 2.95%, more than a four-year high. But they fell back as the stock market saw an early-February volatility flare-up and fresh tariffs were imposed by President Donald Trump on imported washing machines and solar panels, drawing investors into haven assets like government bonds. Yields and debt prices move in opposite directions.via