TradingKey - Views on the current U.S. Treasury market are sharply divided between Wall Street and the U.S. government. While U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent strongly defended Trump administration policies, claiming that the Treasury market has remained stable, DoubleLine Capital’s Jeffrey Gundlach warned of an imminent reckoning in the bond market. He suggested that long-term Treasury yields could rise to 6%.
On Wednesday (June 11), Bessent testified at the House hearing, where he insisted that there has never been an issue with U.S. financial stability.
He pointed out that despite increased volatility in the Treasury market in April, the market has continued to function smoothly, auctions have gone well, and end-user demand continues to grow. So far this year, the U.S. has been the only major economy among global regions to see a decline in its 10-year bond yield.
However, most seasoned Wall Street professionals disagree. With the U.S. twin deficits likely to widen further and Trump’s policy agenda undermining confidence in dollar assets, the Treasury market — especially the long-end — remains a concern.
Jeffrey Gundlach said on Wednesday that today’s market environment bears a resemblance to both the period before the internet bubble burst in 1999 and the years immediately preceding the global financial crisis in 2006–2007.
Gundlach warned that people are now realizing that long-dated Treasuries are not a legitimate flight-to-quality asset, and a reckoning is coming.
He believes that as the economy begins to weaken, long-term bond yields may continue to rise. If yields were to reach 6%, it could prompt the Federal Reserve to intervene and launch quantitative easing, purchasing long-dated Treasuries to contain borrowing costs.
The 30-year Treasury yield hit a 20-year high of 5.15% last month, and currently trades around 4.902%. Although it has pulled back, it remains nearly 50 basis points above its April lows.