Stocks vs. Bonds: The 5% Yield Effect

Stocks React as 10-Year Treasury Yield Nears 5%, Stirring Investor Anxiety

The U.S. bond market is off to a turbulent start this year, with a sharp selloff in Treasury securities rattling financial markets. Over the past week, yields on U.S. Treasury bonds have climbed significantly, pushing the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield dangerously close to the 5% threshold.

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This level, rarely seen since the global financial crisis, has captured the market’s attention despite previous flirtations with the 5% mark in recent years.

“Stocks are spooked by the 5% level on the 10-year [yield] because it represents the outer limit of an entire generation’s experience with prevailing interest rates over the past two decades,” said Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research. “The last time we breached this level was mid-2007, and we all know how that story ended.”

Historical Context and Market Sentiment

The 10-year yield last surpassed 5% in June 2007, just months before the onset of the Great Recession. While the economic landscape of 2025 is notably different, with a more stable banking system but significantly higher U.S. federal debt, Colas points out that financial narratives often anchor to simple, psychologically significant benchmarks like the 10-year yield.

In his analysis, Colas suggests that while the U.S. economy might withstand a 5% yield, equity markets may struggle to adjust.

Recent Data and Market Impact

Last week, robust U.S. economic data led traders to speculate that the Federal Reserve might delay planned interest-rate cuts until the summer. This shift in expectations triggered a selloff in equities. The S&P 500 erased much of its postelection gains, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average experienced its worst start to a year since 2016.

Notably, the 10-year yield came close to 5% in October 2023, peaking at 4.987% before retreating. That episode also triggered a sharp decline in equities, highlighting investor sensitivity to rapid yield increases.

Structural Shifts Over the Last 20 Years

Colas emphasizes that, apart from a brief spike in 2023, the 10-year yield has remained well below 5% over the past two decades. Factors such as sluggish economic growth post-Great Recession and extensive Federal Reserve bond-buying programs have historically kept yields low.

Market Outlook

As of Monday, U.S. stocks showed mixed performance. The Nasdaq Composite fell 0.4%, while the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 0.2% and 0.9%, respectively. Meanwhile, the 10-year Treasury yield edged up to around 4.802%, and the 30-year yield reached 4.986%, according to FactSet data.

Investors now await key inflation data due later this week, which could further shape expectations for Federal Reserve policy and market direction.

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