Treasury Yields Are Hitting A Major Inflection Point

 | Nov 02, 2017 01:29AM ET

From Mike Burnick: My colleague Bill Hall has been telling investors all year to watch just ONE indicator to gauge the path financial markets will take.

That is, the yield on the U.S. 10-Year. Treasury note. And he’s absolutely correct.

The 10-year has spent this year stuck in a trading range between roughly 2% on the low end, and 2.5% at the highs. Bond market investors have essentially been playing tug-of-war with Treasuries, pushing the bond market back and forth within this range.

On the one hand, they’re concerned about signs of accelerating economic growth. And with it, the threat of inflation. After all, global central banks have engineered a near-zero (and at times sub-zero) interest-rate environment for several years.

And the staggering amount of cheap money sloshing around the global financial system today is potential rocket fuel for inflation.

All that’s needed to ignite it is a lit match.