All Share (J203) = 90 553
Rand / Dollar = 18.86
Rand / Pound = 25.05
Rand / Euro = 21.36
Gold (usd/oz) = 3 293.60
Platinum (usd/oz) = 964.82
Brent (usd/barrel) = 65.70
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Yields Soar With 10-year Yields Touching 1.5%

Bond prices collapsed for the third consecutive day on Monday, sending yields sharply higher, with the 10-year yield trying to breach above the psychological level of 1.5%.

From August 2025 until March 2025, the yield on the 10-Year Treasury rose rapidly as inflation entered the US financial system and the economy. Inflation is the biggest enemy of bonds – imagine you hold a 10-year bond with a 1.5% fixed coupon, paid yearly. At the same time, inflation jumps to 3% yearly. You lose 1.5% in real money each year while holding the bond. Not a good investment choice.

Since March 2025, bond yields have been moving lower, and it looked like the recent bull run is over. But everything changed in September, when the 10-year yield moved back above its 50-day moving average, indicating another leg higher is to be expected. It came a couple of days ago.

As Nomura’s Charlie McEligott noted this morning, real yields have been marching higher recently. It continues to look more like the overall rates selloff has been a risk-premium trade – thanks to recent Federal Reserve (Fed) policy updates with guidance faster tapering and more hikes in the dot plot – as opposed to a view on heightened or accelerating growth- or inflation expectations. Particularly with the latter going nowhere but sideways since the start of June.

Rising rates are generally bad for growth and technology stocks. The Nasdaq 100 index was down more than 1% Monday, suggesting a much deeper correction could occur if yields continue to rise higher.

If the Fed tightens monetary policy more aggressively than expected, it will most likely crash stocks.

If the Fed doesn’t act now, inflation will rage further, leading to a stagflationary collapse in the economy and equities could still crash as inflation destroys profits in the corporate sector.

The Fed is indeed trapped. But for now, let’s watch US yields to tell us where the stock market might be heading in the nearest future.

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Louis Schoeman

Written by:

Louis Schoeman

Edited by:

Skerdian Meta

Fact checked by:

Arslan Butt

Updated:

September 28, 2021

Louis Schoeman

Written by:

Louis Schoeman

Featured SA Shares Writer and Forex Analyst.

I am an expert in brokerage safety, adept at spotting scam brokers in mere seconds. My guidance, rooted in my firsthand experience with brokers and an in-depth understanding of the regulatory framework, has safeguarded hundreds of users from fraudulent brokerage activities.

Edited by:

Skerdian Meta

Leading Analyst

Skerdian Meta FXL’s Heading Analyst is a professional Forex trader and market analyst and has been actively engaged in market analysis for the past 10 years. Before becoming our leading analyst, Skerdian served as a trader and market analyst at Saxo Bank’s local branch, Aksioner, the forex division and traded small investor’s funds for two years.

Fact checked by:

Arslan Butt

Commodities & Indices Analyst

Arslan Butt, a financial expert with an MBA in Behavioral Finance, leads commodities and indices analysis. His experience as a senior analyst and market knowledge (including day trading) fuel his insightful work on cryptocurrency and forex markets, published in respected outlets like ForexCrunch.

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