Too much supply, too little appetite
The air is getting thinner in the sovereign debt mines. The first cough isn’t coming from the usual fragile corners of emerging markets but from the heart of the developed world. UK gilts—those once-staid, gentlemanly instruments of British prudence—are now whistling a warning note that reverberates far beyond Threadneedle Street.
Yes, the headlines scream of crisis and collapse, but what really matters is the steady grind higher in long-term yields, a slow tightening of the vice that governments everywhere are beginning to feel. UK 30-year yields touched 5.75%, a level not seen since 1998, and that spike is less a local drama than a symptom of a global condition. France, wrestling once again with its political demons, has seen long-end yields climb to their loftiest since 2009. The U.S., where the debt pile looks more like a mountain range than a molehill, watches its own 30-year yields edge toward 5%. Even Japan—perennial outlier, where bonds typically doze undisturbed—has been shaken awake, with its 30-year yields hitting record highs. Canada, Germany, name your sovereign—the strain is everywhere. The only oddball is Italy, suddenly embraced by investors as if it had discovered fiscal virtue overnight. But one swallow doesn’t make a summer, and one Italy doesn’t offset the reality of a world groaning under the weight of its promises.
The dynamic is simple enough: too much supply, too little appetite. Pension funds—the once-reliable whales of the long-end market—are shrinking back, their capacity to hoover up decades of paper diminished. Asset managers are already stuffed to the gills. Money managers are beginning to mutter “enough,” and the price of convincing them to lock up funds for thirty years has climbed relentlessly higher. Borrowing into the future has become like haggling with a loan shark: the terms are getting uglier, the compounding more punishing.
Governments face a trilemma with no painless escape. They can keep borrowing and saddle themselves with decades of crippling costs, effectively mortgaging growth. They can cut spending or hike taxes, politically toxic levers that threaten social contracts already fraying. Or they can let inflation gnaw away at the debt, a slow-motion theft from savers and a corrosive force on real wealth. None of these routes inspire much confidence. Even in the UK, where a majority government theoretically gives room to maneuver, the choices are constrained. Elsewhere, the political machinery is even more jammed. In the U.S., the thinly disguised plan to muscle the central bank into forcing down interest rates while tolerating hotter inflation is a paradox that borders on madness: playing with fire after being elected to put it out.
Meanwhile, traders smell blood in the water. Hedge funds running steepeners are cashing in, correctly betting that long yields would stretch away from their short-term cousins. Gold owners, too, sit comfortably in the glow of new record highs, a signal that the world prefers the certainty of ancient metal to the promises of politicians scribbled on bond certificates. When trust in “risk-free” assets falters, gold doesn’t just glitter—it blares like a warning siren.
And equities should take no comfort in the drama. The bond market is not some sealed chamber where problems remain contained. It is the foundation stone of global asset pricing. If the anchor shifts higher, the frothiest corners of equity markets are left exposed, their valuations floating in thinner air. The cost of money reprices everything.
Markets are cyclical storytellers, and every few months the script of the “great bond crisis” is dusted off and performed again. But with each iteration, the stage feels a little more fragile, the chorus of higher yields a little louder, the exits a little more crowded. Governments will, as always, find ways to roll over their debts, paying whatever price investors demand. Yet the bill keeps rising, and with it the sense that we are moving toward an unavoidable reckoning.
The canary is not dead, but its song is sharp and insistent. The question now is whether anyone in the mine above is listening—or whether they prefer to believe the air is still safe to breathe while the pressure mounts all around them.
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