Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Jun 21
Bond Traders Eye Spending Data After 2026 Fed Hike Bets Send 2-Year Yields Soaring
Updated
Updated · Bloomberg · Jun 21

Bond Traders Eye Spending Data After 2026 Fed Hike Bets Send 2-Year Yields Soaring

3 articles · Updated · Bloomberg · Jun 21

Summary

  • This week’s US personal spending data is the next key test for Treasury traders deciding whether last week’s sharp hawkish repricing went too far.
  • 2-year Treasury yields jumped as markets moved to price in a Federal Reserve rate hike in 2026 after Chairman Kevin Warsh’s first press conference.
  • Warsh’s pledge to restore price stability eased fears he would bow to President Donald Trump’s pressure for lower borrowing costs, reinforcing the market’s tougher rate view.
  • Oil prices are also in focus because any renewed energy-driven inflation could strengthen the case that the bond market’s shift toward higher-for-longer rates is justified.

Insights

With the Fed abandoning forward guidance, are markets flying blind into a new era of interest rate volatility?
As Treasury yields hit multi-decade highs, are 'risk-free' bonds now the market's most dangerous bet?
Is the Fed's inflation battle misjudging AI's power to lower prices sooner than expected?