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A country's bond yield reflects market confidence in its ability to repay debt. The US 30-year yield crossing 5% is a stress signal. Critically, this is now a global phenomenon across G7 nations, indicating widespread lack of faith in the world's leading economies and leaving no safe haven.
The current US rates sell-off is characterized by rising real yields rather than just higher inflation expectations. This specific type of move is the most damaging for emerging markets because it tightens global financial conditions, making it difficult for EM rates to decouple from US pressure.
Despite rising JGB yields relative to US Treasuries, the Yen is weakening, not strengthening. This is classic emerging-market price action, signaling that investors believe Japan cannot afford higher rates and will be forced to print money. This serves as a warning for other indebted Western nations.
While emerging market sovereign credit spreads have widened only slightly, the real threat to lower-rated countries comes from the sharp sell-off in US Treasuries. This pushes the total 'all-in' borrowing yield significantly higher, threatening market access for frontier markets even if their specific risk premium remains contained.
The surge in gold's value isn't just about uncertainty; it's a direct signal that foreign central banks and major investors are losing confidence in U.S. treasuries as a safe asset. This shift threatens the global dominance of the U.S. dollar.
The failure of Silicon Valley Bank was not an isolated event but a predictable outcome of a global issue. Many entities, including pension funds and insurance companies, are "leveraged long" on government bonds whose values plummeted as interest rates rose.
The knee-jerk reaction to a geopolitical shock is often a bond market rally (flight to safety). However, if the shock impacts supply (e.g., oil), the market can quickly reverse. It pivots from pricing geopolitical risk to pricing the risk of persistent inflation, forcing yields higher in anticipation of rate hikes.
For 40 years, falling rates pushed 'safe' bond funds into increasingly risky assets to chase yield. With rates now rising, these mis-categorized portfolios are the most vulnerable part of the financial system. A crisis in credit or sovereign debt is more probable than a stock-market-led crash.
A major bond market crisis is forecast for the US in the next 3-4 years. The catalyst will be when 100% of federal tax revenue is needed for debt interest and entitlements around 2030, leaving no funds for other government functions and potentially spooking large sovereign wealth funds.
Unlike historical precedents, the current geopolitical conflict has triggered a significant sell-off in US long bonds. This suggests a regime change where high sovereign debt and inflation fears mean bonds no longer serve their traditional flight-to-safety role.
Historical data indicates a critical tipping point for equity markets. While lower yields support stocks, the median weekly S&P 500 return becomes negative once the 10-year Treasury yield rises into the 4.25%-5.00% range, presenting a major risk in the current environment.