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Valuation frameworks indicate 10-year Treasury yields are 25-30 basis points too low. This represents the largest deviation from fair value since the market turmoil following the spring 2023 regional banking crisis, suggesting a strong likelihood of rates rising in the medium term.

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The "term premium," the extra yield investors demand for holding long-term bonds, is breaking out after years of Fed suppression. Its resurgence indicates investors are now demanding compensation for long-term inflation and sovereign risk, posing a major threat to markets reliant on cheap leverage.

Contrary to fears of a spike, a major rise in 10-year Treasury yields is unlikely. The current wide gap between long-term yields and the Fed's lower policy rate—a multi-year anomaly—makes these bonds increasingly attractive to buyers. This dynamic creates a natural ceiling on how high long-term rates can go.

Valuation models show U.S. Treasury yields are too low compared to global peers, particularly German Bunds. The Bund-Treasury spread is seen as 8-10 basis points too low, suggesting U.S. rates could underperform and rise more than their international counterparts, marking a shift to a domestic-driven story.

Bonds are caught between inflationary pressures (negative) and growth risks (positive). This tension is viewed as unsustainable and likely to resolve with yields falling, as either inflation abates or a prolonged disruption forces a focus on severe growth risks.

A key macro theme is the decoupling of US and German interest rate paths. J.P. Morgan expects US Treasury yields to rise toward 4.5% due to a hawkish Fed and strong labor markets. Conversely, weak eurozone growth and lower fiscal pressure suggest German yields have scope to fall, creating a clear medium-term relative value opportunity.

The market is pricing in approximately three more rate cuts for next year, totaling around 110 basis points. However, J.P. Morgan's analysis, supported by the Fed's own dot plot, suggests only one additional cut is likely, indicating that current market pricing for easing is too aggressive.

According to BlackRock's CIO Rick Reeder, the critical metric for the economy isn't the Fed Funds Rate, but a stable 10-year Treasury yield. This stability lowers volatility in the mortgage market, which is far more impactful for real-world borrowing, corporate funding, and international investor confidence.

The bond market is a better indicator for mortgage rates than the Fed. The current spread between 5-year and 10-year Treasury notes implies that investors expect the 5-year note's yield to be 100 basis points higher in five years than it is today. Since mortgage rates are closely tied to these yields, this suggests a potential for higher, not lower, mortgage rates in the medium term.

Future bond returns are highly predictable. The current yield on a 10-year bond provides a reliable forecast of its annualized return over the next decade. This is because capital gains from falling rates are offset by lower reinvestment yields, and capital losses from rising rates are offset by higher yields.

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.

J.P. Morgan's Model Shows 10-Year Yields Are Most Undervalued Since 2023's Banking Crisis | RiffOn