Inflation fears push bond yields higher while tech stocks hit new highs | Business

There is a widening gap between how players in the financial markets perceive the future. Momentum traders in the equity market continue to push technology stocks to new highs while bond traders are becoming more bearish. Can both be right?
In the short run, yes, in the medium term, not so much. On Friday, markets pulled back amid pressure on bond prices, which sent yields higher. Bond yields on the U.S. 30-year Treasury Bond surpassed 5 percent this week. The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury bond hit 4.57 percent. Both are usually warning signs for the stock market.
Here’s what you need to know. The higher the yields go, the more expensive it becomes to borrow. The more it costs to borrow, the less likely new investments are to be made down the road. Fewer investments lead to weaker earnings, which in turn lead to lower stock prices. Capiche?
The issue that has the bond market in such a dour mood is inflation. I have been warning readers for months that inflation is rising. The Iran war has made it worse. This week, the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Producer Price Index (PPI) for April removed any doubt that inflation is making a big comeback. The PPI numbers were up 1 percent from the prior month. That’s the highest since March 2022. The CPI was also hotter than expected and will be much higher when the May numbers are announced in a month’s time.
That should come as no surprise to you, since you are paying north of $4.50 per gallon at the pump for gasoline, while diesel is above $6. You may have noticed your credit card bills are also higher (and you’re spending less), as are your weekly grocery tabs. It is an inflationary spiral that will continue.
As inflation rises, bondholders will insist on a higher real rate of return — meaning returns after inflation. Consequently, as inflation increases, investors demand higher yields to compensate. This cause-and-effect relationship suggests bond investors see significant risk, so why is the stock market at record highs?
The rate of return has something to do with that. Market participants can’t seem to get enough of anything and everything related to artificial intelligence. More than a trillion dollars a year is being poured into this area, with more expected next year. Ask any of the mega companies making these investments, and they will tell you that the rate of return they expect will be stupendous sometime in the future.
How much? Well, no one really knows but “a lot.” Certainly, a “lot” more than whatever the inflation rate is right now and “a lot” more than whatever a measly old bond is yielding. That is the name of the game. Momentum traders are having a field day. There is a buying frenzy underway to protect one’s capital. It will work until it doesn’t.
Trump’s tariffs, the continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz, the resulting rise in oil prices, the fiscal spending spree underway, the skyrocketing deficit and national debt — it’s all inflationary. Buying stocks that can outperform inflation and bond yields both now and in the future is how it’s done. Is that working? Just look at the returns of the semiconductor sector so far this year or technology overall.
In the meantime, Kevin Warsh has taken over as the central bank’s head. Given the rise in inflation, it seems almost impossible for him to acquiesce to the president’s desire to see interest rates lower. In reality, the betting markets are starting to price in the possibility of interest rate hikes by the end of the year.
As for the president’s visit to China, it appears to have been mostly pomp with little in the way of circumstance. Disappointed by the lack of major trade announcements or other economic breakthroughs, investors sold off Southeast Asian markets, including China, as well as markets in Europe and the U.S.
The breadth of U.S. stock markets has been shrinking as indexes climbed. Fewer and fewer stocks, mostly large-cap tech stocks, have been largely responsible for the market’s gains over the last few weeks. We are overdue for a bout of profit-taking in this “V” shaped recovery since March 31. I would like to see a few percentage points shaved off this market. It would pave the way for further gains over the summer.
There, you now have all you need to know in figuring out the relationship between bonds and stocks. the entire sum of financial knowledge in a nutshell.




