Normally, investors rush into Treasurys at a whiff of economic chaos but now they are selling them as not even the lure of higher interest payments on the bonds is getting them to buy. The freak development has experts worried that big banks, funds and traders are losing faith in America as a good place to store their money.

“The fear is the U.S. is losing its standing as the safe haven,” said George Cipolloni, a fund manager at Penn Mutual Asset Management. “Our bond market is the biggest and most stable in the world, but when you add instability, bad things can happen.”

That could be bad news for consumers in need of a loan — and for President Donald Trump, who had hoped his tariff pause earlier this week would restore confidence in the markets.

  • sp3ctr4l@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    The prices and yields of bonds have an inverse relationship:

    If price goes down, yield goes up.

    The yield is also known as the interest rate.

    This interest rate * the purchase price is paid by the US government to the bondholder at the end of the duration of its term.

    When you look at the US Federal budget, and see the amount that goes toward making debt payments…

    This, bonds, are a very big part of what you are looking at.

    If the interest rate on US debt instruments are going up… that means more and more of the budget has to be allocated toward debt repayment.

    While yes, extremely directly, bond yields rising doesn’t… mechanically make the passing of a budget impossible in some kind of procedural way…

    It very much makes the stakes higher as now our growing debt problem is growing even faster.