The bond market is shaking Wall Street again, this time because of
worries about tax cuts
[May 23, 2025] By
STAN CHOE
NEW YORK (AP) — Wall Street’s quiet corner is making noise again.
While the bond market is typically seen as slower moving, it can pack a
heavy punch when it’s alarmed. And right now, it’s getting worried about
how much more Washington is preparing to pile onto its spiraling
mountain of debt because of its desire to cut taxes.
The House of Representatives approved a bill of tax breaks early
Thursday that could add trillions of dollars to the federal government’s
debt, and it’s heading to the Senate next. Worries about the U.S. debt
have sent yields jumping in the bond market, which in turn has shaken
the stock market. The S&P 500 is potentially heading toward its worst
week in seven.
In the past, angry reactions from the bond market have been so strong
that they've forced governments to backtrack on policies and even led to
the ouster of some political leaders. To be sure, many veteran investors
say it would be overblown or at least premature to say “bond-market
vigilantes” are rounding up this time around, because yields have not
jumped high enough to indicate a crisis. But the higher yields will
nevertheless have wide-reaching effects.
“I wouldn't look at this from an apocalyptical dynamic, but there are
real ramifications," said Nate Thooft, a senior portfolio manager at
Manulife Investment Management. “Look at mortgage rates.”
Here's a look at what's going on:

How much is the bond market moving?
The centerpiece of the U.S. bond market is the 10-year Treasury, and its
yield has climbed to 4.54% from 4.43% at the end of last week and just
4.01% early last month. That's a notable move for the bond market, which
measures things in hundredths of percentage points.
That yield shows roughly how much in interest the U.S. government needs
to pay investors to get them to lend it cash for 10 years. Washington
needs that cash because it consistently spends more than it takes in
through tax revenue. And when bond investors are more wary of lending to
the U.S. government, yields for Treasurys rise.
The moves have been sharpest for the longest-term bonds. The yield on a
30-year Treasury has topped 5% and is getting close to where it was
before the 2008 financial crisis wiped out interest rates.
Why is the bond market upset?
Bond investors hate inflation because it means the future payments that
bonds will give them won't be able to buy as much stuff.
Worries are rising about the potential for higher inflation for a couple
reasons. On one hand are President Donald Trump's tariffs, which could
push up prices for all kinds of products. A bigger, more long-term
concern is how much debt the U.S. government is building up.
Those debt concerns gained momentum at the end of last week after
Moody’s Ratings became the last of the three major rating agencies to
say the U.S. government no longer deserves a top-tier credit rating
because of its troubles keeping its debt in check. The worries then
built through this week as the House moved forward on its tax-cut bill
that it approved early Thursday.
Other factors have also been pushing yields up recently, including
increasing hopes that the U.S. economy will not fall into a recession
after Trump delayed many of his stiff tariffs, particularly against
China.

[to top of second column] |

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt speaks with reporters
as an image of President Donald Trump's post on Truth Social
regarding the tax cuts package appears on screen in the James Brady
Press Briefing Room at the White House, Thursday, May 22, 2025, in
Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
 What's this about vigilantes?
In the past, the bond market has recoiled at policies that it's
found distasteful. Sometimes, the reaction is violent enough to
scare politicians.
Trump himself said that the bond market may have played a role in
his decision earlier this year to delay many of his tariffs, saying
that he noticed investors “were getting a little queasy.”
The bond market also helped make Liz Truss the United Kingdom's
shortest-serving prime minister in 2022, when it revolted against
her plan to cut taxes and raise spending without a way to pay for
them. 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.
Are the vigilantes in the room with us now?
While there is some element of vigilantism that's keeping Treasury
yields higher than they would be otherwise, the reaction so far by
the bond market likely isn't enough to get Trump or Congress to back
off their efforts to cut taxes.
“I don't really expect it to snowball or last,” said Brian Rehling,
head of global fixed income strategy at Wells Fargo Investment
Institute. “I don’t think this is going to rise to a level of a
crisis.”
Treasury yields calmed on Thursday, for example. And the United
States isn't the only country seeing yields for its bonds rise.
That's happening for other developed economies around the world,
particularly Japan.
Plus, all of the issues about the U.S. government's debt are well
known, and critics have been warning for years that it's heading on
an unsustainable path. It still might be years before the U.S.
government's rising debt load triggers a panic button in financial
markets, Rehling said.

So why should I care?
When Treasury yields rise, it means more of taxpayers' dollars are
going just to repay the national debt rather than to keep the
government running.
Higher yields can also filter into the rest of the economy and make
it tougher for U.S. households and businesses to get their own
loans. Mortgage rates track 10-year Treasury yields, for example,
and the average rate on a 30-year mortgage just hit its highest
level since mid-February.
Higher Treasury yields can also translate into higher rates for
everything from credit cards to auto loans. That means a sharp
enough rise can put the brakes on the U.S. economy by discouraging
businesses and households from borrowing and spending, raising the
risk of a recession.
High yields can also discourage investors from paying high prices
for stocks and other investments.
All of that, of course, seems to be getting only more difficult to
predict. “We don’t know how things are going to all develop,”
Rehling said, pointing to how “things seem to change by the day with
Washington.”
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