- Bond traders are pricing in a Fed rate hike by mid-2027, with the 10-year yield at 4.47% and an options trade last week targeting 5%+ within months — a level not seen since 2023
- Friday’s May payrolls report is the week’s key catalyst: consensus expects ~90,000 jobs added and unemployment steady at 4.3%; a strong print could accelerate pricing for June FOMC to drop its easing bias
- The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge — PCE — ran at 3.8% annually in April, nearly double the 2% target; Bloomberg Economics estimates the bond-yield surge since the Iran war began has already tightened financial conditions by the equivalent of 75 basis points of rate hikes
- Two-year yields at ~4% are now 60bps above late-February levels and trading above the Fed’s current 3.5–3.75% policy range, with shorter maturities seen as the defensive trade while long-end risk remains elevated
What Happened?
The Iran war’s oil shock has done something few anticipated: it has flipped the bond market narrative from rate cuts to rate hikes. PCE inflation printed at 3.8% in April — nearly twice the Fed’s 2% target — and elevated energy prices show no sign of rolling over while the Strait of Hormuz remains contested. Bond traders are now pricing a hike by mid-2027, and a prominent options trade last week targeted 10-year yields above 5% within months. The 2-year yield is at roughly 4%, sitting above the Fed’s current 3.5–3.75% policy band. June’s FOMC will be Chair Kevin Warsh’s first meeting, and the expectation is growing that the committee will remove its easing bias from the statement — a signal that the next move is equally likely to be a hike as a cut.
Why It Matters?
The bond market’s repricing is already doing monetary policy work without the Fed having to act. Bloomberg Economics calculates the rise in yields since the Iran conflict began has tightened financial conditions by the equivalent of 75bps of rate increases — a meaningful drag on mortgage rates, corporate borrowing costs, and investment decisions. DWS’s George Catrambone said yields are “creating headwinds that will eventually come through.” The labour market is the swing variable: as long as payrolls remain solid, the Fed has no reason to ease, and every hot inflation print makes the case for hiking rather than cutting. The danger is a wage-inflation squeeze on consumers at the same time that energy costs bite — a stagflationary impulse that markets have not fully priced. For equity markets riding a historic rally, a bond market that reprices toward 5% on 10-years would be a significant headwind on valuations.
What’s Next?
Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report is the week’s most important data point. A +90K print with 4.3% unemployment would validate the resilient-labour-market thesis and cement expectations for June easing-bias removal. A upside surprise — say, +150K+ — would aggressively price in earlier hikes and could push 10-year yields back toward 4.6–4.7%. A miss would give doves room to push back on the hiking narrative. Before Friday, watch JOLTS (Tuesday), ADP private payrolls and ISM services (Wednesday), and initial jobless claims (Thursday) for directional signals. The June FOMC meeting in mid-June — Warsh’s debut — is shaping up to be one of the most consequential Fed decisions in years: drop the easing bias and signal the hiking door is open, or hold language steady and risk looking behind the inflation curve.
Source: Bloomberg












