In the early stages of a Fed easing cycle, short-term rates fall while long-term rates remain sticky, causing the yield curve to steepen. The rally in long-dated bonds only occurs much later, after investors get comfortable with low rates and begin chasing carry trades.

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The bond market will become volatile not when rates hit a certain number, but when the market perceives the Fed's cutting cycle has ended and the next move could be a hike. This "legitimate pause" will cause a rapid, painful steepening of the yield curve.

Fed rate cuts primarily lower short-term yields. If long-term yields remain high or rise, this steepens the curve. Because mortgage rates track these longer yields, they can actually increase, creating a headwind for housing affordability despite an easing monetary policy.

Jeff Gundlach notes a significant market anomaly: long-term interest rates have risen substantially since the Fed began its recent cutting cycle. Historically, Fed cuts have always led to lower long-term rates. This break in precedent suggests a fundamental regime change in the bond market.

The Fed plans to align its balance sheet duration with the Treasury's by reducing its holdings of long-term bonds. This would steepen the yield curve by raising long-term rates (hurting mega-caps) while simultaneously cutting the Fed Funds rate to ease pressure on smaller businesses with floating-rate debt.

A high-conviction view for 2026 is a material steepening of the U.S. Treasury yield curve. This shift will not be driven by long-term rates, but by the two-year yield falling as markets more accurately price in future Federal Reserve rate cuts.

The Fed is prioritizing its labor market mandate over its inflation target. This "asymmetrically dovish" policy is expected to lead to stronger growth and higher inflation, biasing inflation expectations and long-end yields upward, causing the yield curve to steepen.

With credit curves already steep and the U.S. Treasury curve expected to steepen further, the optimal risk-reward in corporate bonds lies in the 5 to 10-year maturity range. This specific positioning in both U.S. and European markets is key to capturing value from 'carry and roll down' dynamics.

A new market dynamic has emerged where Fed rate cuts cause long-term bond yields to rise, breaking historical patterns. This anomaly is driven by investor concerns over fiscal imbalances and high national debt, meaning monetary easing no longer has its traditional effect on the back end of the yield curve.

The Federal Reserve is executing an underappreciated policy of shortening its balance sheet duration. This supports short-term rates while pressuring long-term bonds, causing a yield curve steepening that creates a structural headwind for long-duration assets like crypto and high-growth technology stocks.

When a steepening yield curve is caused by sticky long-term yields, overall borrowing costs remain high. This discourages companies from issuing new debt, and the reduced supply provides a powerful technical support that helps keep credit spreads tight, even amid macro uncertainty.