Resurgence Of 10-Year Bond Yield: Winners & Losers

 | Apr 24, 2018 09:56PM ET

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, a benchmark for interest rates, hit 3% for the first time in about four years. The Federal Reserve, in fact, has already stepped up the pace of monetary tightening from two to three additional rate hikes this year.

Rising inflation expectations led to Treasuries getting sold off. After all, higher commodity prices diminish the value of a bond’s fixed interest payments. The 10-year yield increased as treasuries came under pressure.

Investors have exited bond proxies, including utilities and consumer staples. Meanwhile, financials, technology and home improvement suppliers are expected to benefit from a resurgent benchmark bond yield.

Benchmark Bond Yield Reaches Key Milestone

The 10-year government bond yield increased 0.9 basis points (bps) to 2.983% on Apr 24, after touching a four-year intraday high of 3.001%, according to Tradeweb data. The benchmark bond yield had exceeded the 3% mark briefly in 2013 and January 2014, which was toward the end of the bond market wipeout, better known as the “taper tantrum.”