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Global Bond Markets Are Imploding: But What Are They Saying About China, Oil, and the Economy?
Global bond yields jumped on Friday as oil prices climbed. The UK 30-year gilt hit 5.82%, its highest level since 1998.
The selloff hit US Treasuries, UK gilts, and Japanese government bonds. Traders are now asking what fixed income is signaling about China, oil supply, and government deficits.
A Synchronized Yield Spike Across Major Economies
Allianz chief economic adviser Mohamed El-Erian said the move was driven by the oil jump. Japan’s producer price data also came in hotter than expected.
The 30-year Japanese yield traded at 4% for the first time since 1999. The UK 10-year sat near 5.14% and the German 10-year added 7.5 basis points to 3.12%.
US Treasury yields climbed in tandem. The 10-year held near 4.54%, the 20-year at 5.10%, and the 30-year at 5.09%.
“Every maturity is rising at the same time,” trader Bull Theory highlighted.
Stocks brushed it off. The S&P 500 hovered near a record 7,501 on AI optimism. The S&P earnings yield now sits well below the 10-year, a rare setup last seen in 2003.
“Bond yields do not care about AI. They care about a $2 trillion annual deficit, oil at $100, persistent inflation and a government borrowing more money every single day to fund a war,” Bull Theory added.
What Yields Are Saying About China and the Economy
On China, the signal is skepticism. Mad Money host Jim Cramer said equity markets assume China’s leader Xi Jinping will absorb the oil disruptions tied to President Donald Trump.
He flagged no firm trade commitments. Bond traders appear less convinced.
On the economy, bonds are pricing higher-for-longer inflation. They also reflect swelling deficits and central banks unable to cut quickly.
UK gilts are flagging fiscal stress. Japanese long bonds mark the end of decades of yield repression as the Bank of Japan normalizes policy.
Fixed income is pricing limited diplomatic relief from China, an oil-driven inflation pulse, and higher borrowing costs. Stocks are still pricing AI-driven earnings strength.
Both views cannot stay right indefinitely. The next moves in oil, Bank of Japan signals, and any Trump-Xi follow-up will likely decide which side breaks first.
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