Why A 5.18% Treasury Yield Could Matter More Than Nvidia Earnings
BY Benzinga | TREASURY | 12:32 PM EDTWhile Wall Street remains fixated on upcoming NVIDIA Corp
? NVIDIA
Bond Market Sends Warning Signal
The yield on the 30-year Treasury bond climbed to 5.18% on Tuesday, its highest level since 2007, intensifying the sell-off in long-duration Treasury ETFs and reigniting fears that "higher for longer" interest rates are becoming a structural market problem rather than a temporary one.
That matters because rising Treasury yields do not just hit bonds ? they also pressure the valuations of long-duration growth assets, particularly technology and AI stocks whose future cash flows become less attractive as rates climb.
AI Trade Faces Valuation Pressure
The timing is especially notable as investors prepare for Nvidia
For much of the past two years, Wall Street has largely treated the AI boom as powerful enough to overpower macroeconomic concerns ranging from inflation to Federal Reserve policy.
But a 5%+ long bond yield changes the equation.
Higher Treasury yields raise borrowing costs, tighten financial conditions and increase competition for investor capital, especially when so-called "risk-free" government debt suddenly offers returns not seen in nearly two decades.
That dynamic can create a difficult backdrop for richly valued growth stocks, even when company fundamentals remain strong.
2007 Comparisons Return
The move also carries psychological weight.
The last time 30-year Treasury yields traded at these levels was before the financial crisis, a period many investors still associate with tightening liquidity and growing market stress.
Long-duration Treasury ETFs such as the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF , the iShares 10?20 Year Treasury Bond ETF and the State Street SPDR Portfolio Long Term Treasury ETF
For now, Nvidia
But if Treasury yields continue climbing, Wall Street could increasingly discover that the real story is no longer just artificial intelligence ? it is the rising cost of money itself.
Photo: Olivier Le Moal/Shutterstock
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