10-year Treasury hits 4.1% for first time since July
The 10-year Treasury (^TNX) added as much as 4 basis points on Thursday to hit 4.1% for the first time since late July.
The 10-year has now added roughly 30 basis points over the past week as investors have scaled back their expectations for interest rate cuts amid signs that inflation may be stickier than initially thought while economic growth data holds steady.
For much of the past few years, higher yields have been a headwind for stocks. But Piper Sandler chief investment strategist Michael Kantrowitz told Yahoo Finance on Thursday yields likely have risen enough to be too much of a headwind just yet.
“I don’t think this backup in interest rates is all that worrisome for equities in aggregate,” Kantrowitz said. “But where it does show up is in leadership.”
Kantrowitz pointed out that areas like Real Estate (XLRE) and the small-cap Russell 2000 Index (^RUT), which had benefited from investors anticipating lower rates, have lagged amid the 10-year yields recent rise.
For now, Kantrowitz added, rising rates are driving market leadership more than it is weighing on the overall S&P 500 index.
“If rates keep going higher, I don’t think it’s a massive issue for equities unless it persists for, I’d say, a few months,” he said.