Claire Kuchever: I'd try
--Deja Vu
The most important number in the world at this moment, at least from a financial market standpoint, has to be the yield on 10 yr US Treasury bonds. With nearly $10 trillion in fiscal and monetary stimulus created in the past yr (and more on the way), federal debt clocking in at $28 trillion, and world leverage at all time highs, financial markets can ill afford higher borrowing costs brought about by higher 10 yr rates.
Yet that is precisely what's happening. T note yields have more than doubled off the corona lows and have recently been marching higher on a daily basis.
Sure, rates are still low by historical standards. But policymakers realize that if they lose control of the 10 yr, then the game is up. Thus, Fed heads have been on the tape over the past couple of days trying to jawbone yields lower.
Technically, resistance is just overhead in the 1.5-2.0% zone, so a pause right around here seems intuitive.
Personally, there is no way I'd own long-dated bonds given the field position of rates and a macro set up that screams inflation. Maybe others are coming to similar conclusions.
no positions
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