- The 10-year yield climbed above 3% for the first time since January 2014.
- The yield has been rallying amid worries President Donald Trump’s tariffs are going to spark inflation.
- Those worries have some suggesting four Fed rate hikes could be back in the picture for 2018.
The US 10-year yield has finally reached the elusive 3% level Tuesday morning.
The benchmark yield flirted with the level all day Monday, but it was Tuesday’s stronger than expected Case-Shiller home prices that pushed it through the mark for the first time since January 2014.
The 10-year has been grinding higher since President Donald Trump’s early-March announcement of plans for tariffs on steel and aluminum.
But that rally intensified last week, with the 10-year climbing more than 15 basis points since Wednesday as fears of rising inflation related to President Donald Trump’s tariffs began to surface.
First, the Federal Reserve's Beige Book pointed to growing inflation worries. "There were widespread reports that steel prices rose, sometimes dramatically, due to the new tariff," the Fed said.
Then the Philadelphia Fed branch's prices-paid index surged on the back of Trump's tariff announcement. "Price increases for purchased inputs were reported by 59 percent of the manufacturers this month, up notably from 44 percent in March," the report said.
That has prompted more talk that the Fed could hike interest rates as many as four times this year. It has previously said it expects three rate hike in 2018.
Jeff Gundlach, the founder of DoubleLine Capital, forecast in January that returns on the S&P 500 this year would be negative, and he said his forecast "would become an extraordinarily strong conviction as the 10-year starts to make an accelerated move above 3%."
Currently, stocks are seeing little reaction to the news, with the S&P 500 up 0.4%.