High Bond Yields Are Hitting These Sectors

 | Jun 06, 2013 01:26PM ET

As we all know, the bond yields on the 10- and 30-Year U.S. Treasury Notes have spiked higher recently. That recent spike has affected many leading stocks and sectors that take advantage of the easy money policies by the Federal Reserve. Easy money means cheap money to many companies.

Utilities
One of the important sectors that is highly sensitive to interest rates is the utility stocks. Traders can easily see the recent action in the Utilities Select Sector SPDR (XLU). This sector is trading basically inverse to the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield. The XLU topped out on April 30, 2013 at $41.44 a share, the same day the U.S. Treasury yield bottomed out. The XLU is now trading into some daily chart support, so a bounce is likely to occur soon. Traders can see the same type of pattern in leading utility stocks such as Duke Energy Corp. (IVR ) have dropped recently.

Watch The Yields
Where do yields go from here? Bond yields will certainly move higher if the Federal Reserve begins to tapper its current quantitative easing program. Currently, the Federal Reserve is buying $85 billion a month worth of mortgage-backed securities and U.S. Treasuries. So it is safe to say that yields have been held artificially low for quite a long time. Currently, yields are a bit extended on the charts, but if they begin to consolidate, it would indicate that they are going to move higher. Traders better watch the bond yields for clues to trade these important sectors.