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Bond market 'caught in the middle' amid Trump tax bill push, tariff risk - YAHOO FINANCE
BY
Senior ReporterThe bond market is caught in a tug-of-war between the prospects of pro-growth stimulus from President Trump's sweeping tax bill and inflationary pressures from tariffs, leaving investors with few clear signals of where the economy is headed and rising long-term yields.
"We have policies that on the one hand will boost growth like expansive fiscal stimulus," Kathy Jones, chief fixed income strategist at Charles Schwab, told Yahoo Finance. "Then we have some that will slow growth, like tariffs. ... So the bond market is just caught in the middle."
As of Tuesday, the 30-year Treasury yield (^TYX) hovered near a still-elevated 4.96%, up more than 20 basis points since the start of the year. Meanwhile, the 10-year yield (^TNX) traded around 4.44%.
Long-term yields have climbed in recent weeks, driven by concerns over the US fiscal trajectory as Trump's tax legislation, estimated to add $4 trillion to the national debt over the next decade, heads to the Senate after clearing the House. Trump has vowed to sign the bill into law by July 4.
"We haven't seen this for decades," Jones said, pointing to the recent bond market moves as a reflection of "a lot of worries and uncertainty."
While short-term yields have stayed relatively steady amid expectations that the Fed will keep interest rates unchanged, longer-term yields have climbed more sharply as investors demand greater compensation for mounting deficits and heightened policy risks.
Historically, deficits have had little impact on Treasury yields, largely due to the US's economic dominance and its role as issuer of the world's reserve currency. But that dynamic may be shifting.
"It feels like we're hitting an inflection point," Jones said, warning that markets are demanding a greater risk premium.
Adding to the pressure, provisions in the proposed legislation, such as the Section 899 clause, could raise the cost of holding US assets for foreign investors. Jones warned that this may undermine a vital source of demand for Treasurys.
"Anything that discourages foreign investment in any way, shape, or form, whether it's direct investment or through financial instruments, is going to be negative," Jones said. "We run a large current account deficit. We need that capital inflow. And if we're not getting it, that's going to depress our economy, which means that yields have to rise to a level where foreign investors find them attractive."
Layer in uncertainty around tariffs and inflation, and the fixed income landscape becomes even more difficult to navigate, an uneasiness that has also hit stocks.
'We look like an emerging market'
Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman told Yahoo Finance on Tuesday that recent market signals resemble those typically seen in developing economies.
"The bond market and the currency market are both basically saying, 'Oh my God,'" Krugman said, pointing to the unusual combination of surging long-term interest rates and a weakening dollar. "We look like an emerging market."
"Rising interest rates and a falling dollar is something you expect to see in a developing country, not in the United States of America," he added.
The deeper concern, Krugman said, is that global investors may be losing confidence in America's fiscal credibility. "It's hard to read this stuff without saying that international investors don't consider America a safe haven anymore," he said, citing doubts over the US's willingness or ability to meet its debt payments.
Krugman flagged recent comments from Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who declared that "there is no way America will ever default on its debt." Krugman called that statement "an extremely alarming sign," arguing that the very need to make such a reassurance suggests growing skepticism abroad.
"We're definitely seeing the flood of foreign money dwindle to a trickle," he said. "That's got to be bad for US growth."