By Ben Eisen, MarketWatch

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Treasury prices sank Tuesday, sending yields soaring, as investors shifted away from safe assets alongside cooling tensions in Ukraine.

Russia recalled members of its military that had been participating in war games near the Ukraine border on Tuesday, which eased investor fears that Russia would step up its movement into Ukraine following its entrance into the Crimean region. Nonetheless, Russian President Vladimir Putin said he reserves the right to use force in Ukraine.

On that news, Treasury prices slid alongside the U.S. dollar, gold, and oil. Stocks surged back to record highs.

"Things are cooling off," said Chris Keith, senior vice president and fixed-income manager at Adviser Investments. "The Treasury market has given back all that it has gained yesterday and then a lot more than that."

The 10-year Treasury note (10_YEAR) yield, which rises as prices fall, jumped 9 basis points on the day to 2.699%, more than reversing Monday's drop. The 30-year bond (30_YEAR) yield rose 9 basis points to 3.649%, and the 5-year note (5_YEAR) yield rose 7.5 basis points to 1.536%.

"Some of the comments that came from Putin's press conference this morning suggested that tensions had eased," said Ian Lyngen, senior rates strategist at CRT Capital Group. "While it's not entirely clear the situation is resolved entirely, the market has discounted any potential escalation."

But given the geopolitical uncertainty, Treasury buyers took more neutral positioning, with investors "playing it from the sidelines," Lyngen said. The J.P. Morgan weekly survey of Treasury clients showed flat net positioning Tuesday.

The market also is looking ahead to the February jobs report, due Friday. Economists polled by MarketWatch expect nonfarm payrolls to have risen by 143,000. Reports for January and December have come in substantially below expectations, cutting into optimism about the pace of economic growth, and raising questions about the extent to which frigid winter weather is cooling the economy.

Nonetheless, Torsten Slok, chief international economist at Deutsche Bank Securities, provided a reminder in a Tuesday note that each report has a number of revisions.

"If you think this recovery has felt slow, then maybe the reason is that nonfarm payrolls have been revised up with 40,000 on average for every single month over the past four years," wrote Slok, adding that monthly jobs growth has been closer to 200,000 than 160,000. "This upward bias in revisions is actually quite important because many investors I talk to about the Fed outlook think of 200,000 as a threshold for 'good' or 'not good enough.'"

Pimco founder Bill Gross said in his latest letter to investors Tuesday that so-called risk assets like credit and stocks are set to outperform cash this year, given his assertion that markets will believe the Federal Reserve's promise to keep its key policy rates low for a substantial amount of time. Returns on risk assets depend on the Fed's credibility, which he believes is currently intact, but may crack down the road, he said. He also noted that liquidity in the corporate bond market may be challenged as the Fed winds down its bond-buying program.

In other bond news, Puerto Rico's governor signed a bill authorizing a municipal bond sale of up to $3.5 billion in an issuance that would help bolster the struggling island's liquidity situation.

A number of corporate issuers were in the market, including Pitney Bowes Inc. (PBI) and Coca-Cola Co. (KO), according to news reports.

More from MarketWatch:

Mile wide, inch deep: Bond market liquidity dries up

Mutual funds far outperform mutual fund investors

Matthew Lynn: Russia is corrupt, but its markets are bargains

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