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Rates are making investors nervous. Specifically, the 10-year Treasury yield.
Climbing to 4.8% on Monday and a stone’s throw from 5%, the 10-year Treasury yield is at a level that makes investors cautious.
But why exactly? The financial media often talks about this like it’s received wisdom, but what exactly drives investors away from stocks when the 10-year Treasury yield creeps near 5%?
For one, it’s not normal. At least not in the post-financial crisis world. DataTrek co-founder Nicholas Colas pointed out in a note to clients that the 10-year Treasury yield has averaged 2.91% over the past two decades.
“Markets are spooked by the 5% level on 10-years because it is the outer limit of an entire generation’s (20 years) experience with prevailing interest rates,” Colas wrote.
It also introduces unfamiliar questions. After a decade of low rates that enticed anyone seeking gains to the stock market — the “TINA,” a.k.a. there is no alternative narrative — higher rates suddenly look pretty nice, especially given a twitchy stock market.
“A few years ago, when yields were 1%, they didn’t compete with equities because there was no alternative,” Jurrien Timmer, director of global macro at Fidelity Investments, said in an interview with Yahoo Finance. “But now at 5%, or four and three quarters, and the equity market having a similar earnings yield, stocks have to compete with what we consider to be the risk-free asset.”
There are also more direct reasons higher rates can be a tough environment for stocks, like high borrowing costs, which could eventually weigh on economic activity or hurt company profits if they need to refinance at a higher interest rate.
Strategists believe this level of rates in particular challenges the S&P 500’s current high valuation, which sits at a 21.5 forward 12-month price-to-earnings ratio, per FactSet, above the five-year average of 19.7 and the 10-year average of 18.2.
“The closer that the 10-year yield gets to 5% and to cycle highs, the more the market starts to worry about what the implications of that are for valuations, credit conditions, liquidity, etc.,” Dan Suzuki, Richard Bernstein Advisors deputy chief investment officer, told Yahoo Finance.
At a more simple level, the rise in the 10-year yield feels like the most clear depiction of the rising uncertainties in markets. The yield has spiked as concerns about sticky inflation have come clearly into focus. The yield has risen as investors wonder if the Fed will cut interest rates at all this year. It’s ticked higher on days that President-elect Donald Trump discusses a wide-sweeping tariff policy.
This brings us the truth about what’s so unsettling for investors about the rise in bond yields. There’s no straight answer on why they’re rising or when the rise will stop.
“Investors aren’t really sure what is really behind the rise in the 10-year yield,” CFRA head of research Sam Stovall told Yahoo Finance when asked why 5% on the 10-year seems to be such a sticking point for investors. “There’s an awful lot of uncertainty out there, and investors really aren’t sure which way things are going to turn.”
RBC Capital Markets head of US equity strategy Lori Calvasina told Yahoo Finance that over her 20-plus-year career, the market has largely been in a “secularly declining interest rate environment.” The key fear right now is whether or not that’s changing.
“If we break out to this new high, it’s going to sort of take us to a place where we might be able to say, look, we’ve been bouncing around kind of a flattish yield environment, maybe we’re in a structurally rising rate environment,” Calvasina said. “That’s going to flip a lot of modeling on its head. That’s going to be a completely different environment than most people remember.”
The current rates story isn’t really about the level. As Truist co-chief investment officer Keith Lerner pointed out in a note to clients, the 10-year averaged 6.2% from 1950 to 2007. The S&P 500 posted an average annual return of 11.9% over that time.
It’s about uncertainty. The rise in rates feels more like a way to define all the angst brewing among investors in 2025. And for a generation of investors that have had few opportunities to ponder what place a roughly 5% fixed income yield should play in their portfolio, the uncertainty of what keeps driving yields higher and when it ends appears to be the early story of the market in 2025.
Josh Schafer is a reporter for Yahoo Finance. Follow him on X @_joshschafer.
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