Freak sell-off of ‘safe haven’ US bonds raises fear that confidence in
America is fading
[April 12, 2025] By
BERNARD CONDON and STAN CHOE
NEW YORK (AP) — The upheaval in stocks has been grabbing all the
headlines, but there is a bigger problem looming in another corner of
the financial markets that rarely gets headlines: Investors are dumping
U.S. government bonds.
Normally, investors rush into Treasurys at a whiff of economic chaos but
now they are selling them as not even the lure of higher interest
payments on the bonds is getting them to buy. The freak development has
experts worried that big banks, funds and traders are losing faith in
America as a stable, predictable, good place to store their money.
“The fear is the U.S. is losing its standing as the safe haven,” said
George Cipolloni, a fund manager at Penn Mutual Asset Management. “Our
bond market is the biggest and most stable in the world, but when you
add instability, bad things can happen.”
That could be bad news for taxpayers paying interest on the ballooning
U.S. debt, consumers taking out mortgages or car loans — and for
President Donald Trump, who had hoped his tariff pause earlier this week
would restore confidence in the markets.
What's happening?
A week ago, the yield on the 10-year Treasury was 4.01%. On Friday, the
yield shot as high as 4.58% before sliding back to around 4.50%. That’s
a major swing for the bond market, which measures moves by the
hundredths of a percentage point.
Among the possible knock-on effects is a big hit to ordinary Americans
in the form of higher interest rates on mortgages and car financing and
other loans.
“As yields move higher, you’ll see your borrowing rates move higher,
too,” said Brian Rehling, head of fixed income strategy at Wells Fargo
Investment Institute. "And every corporation uses these funding markets.
If they get more expensive, they’re going to have to pass along those
costs customers or cut costs by cutting jobs.”
Treasury bonds are essentially IOUs from the U.S. government, and
they’re how Washington pays its bills despite collecting less in revenue
than it spends.

To be sure, no one can say exactly what mix of factors is behind the
developing bond bust or how long it will last, but it’s rattling Wall
Street nonetheless.
Bonds are supposed to move in the opposite direction as stocks, rising
when stocks are falling. In this way, they act like shock absorbers to
401(k)s and other portfolios in stock market meltdowns, compensating
somewhat for the losses.
“This is Econ 101,” said Jack McIntyre, portfolio manager for Brandywine
Global, adding about the bond sell-off now, “It’s left people scratching
their heads.”

The latest trigger for bond yields to go up was Friday's
worse-than-expected reading on sentiment among U.S. consumers, including
expectations for much higher inflation ahead. But the unusual bond yield
spike this week also reflects deeper worries as Trump’s tariffs threats
and erratic policy moves have made America seem hostile and unstable —
fears that are not likely to go away even after the tariff turmoil ends.
“When the issue is a broader loss of confidence in the United States,
even a much fuller retreat on trade might not work” to bring yields
down, wrote Sarah Bianchi and other analysts at investment bank Evercore
ISI. “We’re not sure any of the tools remaining in Trump’s toolkit will
be sufficient to fully staunch the bleeding.”
U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has said the yield spike is not
unusual or worrisome, pinning the blame on professional investors who
had borrowed too much and needed to sell.
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The Treasury Department building is seen, March 13, 2025, in
Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)
 “I think that it is an uncomfortable
but normal deleveraging that's going on,” he told Fox News Thursday,
adding that it “happens every couple of years.”
Speaking to reporters on Air Force One Friday night, Trump said "The
bond market’s going good. It had a little moment, but I solved that
problem very quickly. I’m very good at this.”
The influence of the bond market
Trump acknowledged that the bond market played a role in his
decision Wednesday to put a 90-day pause on many tariffs, saying
investors “were getting a little queasy.”
If indeed it was the bond market, and not stocks, that made him
change course, it wouldn't come as a surprise.
The bond market's reaction to her tax and budget policy was behind
the ouster of United Kingdom’s Liz Truss in 2022, whose 49 days made
her Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister. James Carville,
adviser to former U.S. President Bill Clinton, also famously said
he’d like to be reincarnated as the bond market because of how much
power it wields.
The instinctual rush into U.S. debt is so ingrained in investors it
even happens when you’d least expect.
People poured money into U.S. Treasury bonds during 2009 Financial
Crisis, for instance, even though U.S. was the source of the
problem, specifically its housing market.
But to Wall Street pros it made sense: U.S. Treasurys are liquid,
stable in price and you can buy and sell them with ease even during
a panic, so of course businesses and traders would rush into them to
wait out the storm.
Yields on U.S bonds quickly fell during that crisis, which had a
benefit beyond cushioning personal financial portfolios. It also
lowered borrowing costs, which helped businesses and consumers
recover.
This time that natural corrective isn’t kicking in.
What's causing the sell-off?
Aside from sudden jitters about the U.S., several other things could
be triggering the bond sell-off.
Some experts speculate that China, a vast holder of U.S. government
bonds, is dumping them in retaliation. But that seems unlikely since
that would hurt the country, too. Selling Treasurys, or essentially
exchanging U.S. dollars for Chinese yuan, would make China's
currency strengthen and its exports more expensive.
Another explanation is that a favored strategy of some hedge funds
involving U.S. debt and lots of borrowing — called the basis trade —
is going against them. That means their lenders are asking to get
repaid and they need to raise cash.
“They are selling Treasurys and that is pushing up yields — that’s
part of it,” said Mike Arone, chief investment strategist at State
Street Global Advisors. “But the other part is that U.S. has become
a less reliable global partner.”
Wells Fargo's Rehling said he’s worried about a hit to confidence in
the U.S., too, but that it's way too early to be sure and that the
sell-off may stop soon, anyway.
“If Treasurys are no longer the place to park your cash, where do
you go?,” he said. “Is there another bond out there that is more
liquid? I don’t think so.”
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