Rising Treasury yields are the biggest challenge to this bull market. Here are the ‘trigger levels’ to watch.

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The Wall Street stock market bull may face headwinds from higher bond yields – Bryan R. Smith/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images

Investors hoping for a Santa Rally have so far been disappointed. The opening bell on Monday shows Wall Street again struggling following a 1.1% dip for the S&P 500 SPX at the end of last week.

One cause for the caution is rising bond yields. The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield BX:TMUBMUSD10Y closed Friday at its highest level in seven months, having jumped nearly a full percentage point since September despite the Federal Reserve cutting its benchmark interest rate. Concerns that President-elect Donald Trump’s tariff and tax-cut policies may exacerbate inflation, while a burgeoning government deficit increases bond supply, have put downward pressure on bond prices.

This may continue to be a problem for equities in coming months, according to a team of Evercore ISI strategists led by Julian Emanuel. “Long term, earnings drive stocks; however, there are times when rising long term yields can exert medium-term pressure on equities even as the backdrop remains favorable,” says Emanuel in a note published Sunday.

Evercore ISI
Evercore ISI –

And he continues: “As 2025 begins, rising long end bond yields pose the biggest challenge to the bull market. Indeed, the latest surge in the 10-year yield helped spur a bout of equity market volatility after 12/18’s Federal Open Market Committee [meeting].”

There are many reasons why benchmark yields may pull back a bit in coming days after their strong surge higher, Emanuel reckons, including elevated Treasury short positions being exited, and the potential for an easing of geopolitical tensions in oil-sensitive areas, which would trim inflation concerns.

However, those aforementioned Trump policies, fiscal deficit factors, and possibly reduced buying of Treasuries by China and Japan, will pressure yields higher in the medium term, so that rising bond and equity market volatility are Emanuel’s base case for the start of the year.

And the important thing to remember is that “yield pressure is agnostic to stock prices, occurring when valuations are not extended (2018) and when they are (1994, 2022),” he says.

Evercore ISI
Evercore ISI –

Crucially, “there isn’t a uniform ‘threshold’ over the decades for 10-year yields” that have caused stocks to correct, according to Emanuel. Indeed, past ‘trigger levels’ have ranged from 3% in 2018 to 6% in 1994.

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