Will Rising Bond Yields Put Equities In Further Danger?

 | Feb 09, 2018 12:27AM ET

In last week’s piece, I asked if rising bond yields could threaten gold prices. Today’s question asks whether the rise in bond yields will endanger equity indices. As I write this, US equity indices are finally posting declines of more than 5-7% from their peaks, something not seen since autumn 2015 when equity markets feared uncertainty ahead of the US presidential elections.

Unlike the major selloffs in indices of the past two years — which were mostly caused by worries about a China slowdown, the current market decline is the manifestation of prolonged selloff in bond markets (tumbling prices and sharp ascent in yields). The fear is that rising bond yields in and out of the US will endanger companies’ future profitability as well as sovereign’s budget deficits.

h2 Fundamental Arguments/h2

We could engage in a long fundamental discussions as to whether the 45% increase in US 10 year bond yields of the past five months to its highest level in four years (2.83%) will introduce a considerably higher risk premium to stocks valuation. Some could argue that depends on sectors, size of companies’ capitalisation, profitability and cash balances.

Others will indicate that 3.00% on the US 10-year yields is the more relevant level to watch because it presents a threat to the level of GDP growth as well as its role as a crucial technical level on the price charts.

h2 Bond Yields Relative to Equity Indices/h2