Ninety percent of the current rise in long-dated Treasury yields is due to the fact that real rates are also rising, said Joseph Kalish of Ned Davis Research.
The current rise in long-dated Treasury yields boils down to mostly one single thing, which is higher real rates resulting from changing expectations for U.S. economic growth, according to Joseph Kalish, chief global macro strategist at Ned Davis Research.
Ordinarily, Treasury yields tend to rise based on a range of factors, such as the possibility of higher future inflation and investors’ demands to be compensated for that risk. This time around appears to be a bit different. “Bond yields have come a long way in a short period of time,” Kalish wrote in a note distributed on Tuesday. “Nearly all of the rise has been due to higher real yields,” though an increase in the supply of U.S. government debt is also likely playing a contributing role.
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