Renowned market strategist Ed Yardeni warns the Federal Reserve is on the verge of losing control of the bond market, a crisis that can only be averted by a hawkish pivot at its June meeting.
Influential strategist Ed Yardeni has issued a stark warning that the Federal Reserve must abandon its easing bias at the June 16-17 policy meeting, arguing that surging bond yields show investors are already forcing the central bank’s hand.
"If the Fed fails to remove its easing bias, investors will conclude that the central bank is behind the curve and will demand an even higher inflation risk premium," Yardeni, president of Yardeni Research, wrote in a note to clients.
The warning comes as the 30-year Treasury yield surged past 5% for the first time since 2007, while the 10-year benchmark reached 4.63%. The bond sell-off follows a string of hotter-than-expected inflation reports, with April’s Producer Price Index climbing 6.0% from a year earlier. Federal funds futures, which had priced in rate cuts just three months ago, now indicate a 75% probability of a rate hike by the end of the year.
The market revolt creates a high-stakes challenge for incoming Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, who will preside over his first FOMC meeting in June. Yardeni argues that a hawkish pivot, while seemingly counterintuitive to the White House's calls for lower rates, may be the only way to placate the "bond vigilantes" and stabilize long-term borrowing costs for the broader economy.
Bond Vigilantes Return
Yardeni, who coined the term "bond vigilantes" in the 1980s to describe investors who protest inflationary policies by selling bonds, declared that they are back and dictating terms. "5% on the long bond isn't attracting value buyers; it's emboldening bond bears and reviving the vigilante mindset," commented Bloomberg market strategist Mark Cranfield. This investor strike is not confined to the US, with yields in Europe and Japan also rising, reducing foreign appetite for US debt.
Wall Street Sounds the Alarm
Yardeni’s view is gaining traction across Wall Street. DoubleLine Capital CEO Jeffrey Gundlach and PIMCO Chief Investment Officer Dan Ivascyn have voiced similar concerns. "With the 2-year Treasury yield nearly 50 basis points above the Fed funds rate, a rate cut seems impossible to me," Gundlach said in a recent Fox News interview. The consensus is clear: the Fed has lost its grip on the narrative, and the market is now leading policy.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.