Mike Smith (MSc, PGdipEd)
Client Education and Training
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Part two of GO's educational series, designed to help new traders understand the key forces that shape global markets.
Every day, traders watch gold, tech stocks and the Australian dollar move, looking for the next catalyst. But behind many major market moves sits another force that can shape direction: bond yields.
Many traders treat bonds as something only institutional investors need to follow. That can leave a major part of the market story out. When yields move, the effect can flow into markets far beyond bonds.
Why bond yields matter
Bond yields are one of the market’s main signals for the cost of money. When yields rise or fall, they can influence currencies, equities, gold and risk appetite because they change how investors value future returns.
At its most basic level, a government bond is a loan from investors to a government.
When an investor buys a bond, they are lending money to that government for a fixed period. In return, the government agrees to pay a fixed amount of interest each year until the bond matures and the original money is returned.
You do not need to trade bonds to understand why they matter. What matters is not only the bond itself, but the return on that bond. That return is called the yield, and it can tell traders how the market is pricing inflation, growth, central bank policy and risk.
When commentators say “yields are rising” or “the yield curve has shifted”, they are usually talking about government bond yields.
The Lifecycle of a Government Bond
1
The Loan
An investor buys a bond, effectively lending capital to the government for a fixed period.
2
The Interest
The government agrees to pay a fixed, recurring amount of interest every year.
3
Maturity
The bond's term ends, and the government returns the original money to the investor.
The Yield
The actual return an investor makes on this process. It acts as a live market signal for inflation, growth, Fed policy, and risk.
Why bond prices and yields move in opposite directions
This is one of the key concepts to understand: bond prices and bond yields move in opposite directions. When bond prices rise, yields fall. When bond prices fall, yields rise.
It can feel counterintuitive at first, but the mechanism is straightforward once the coupon payment is fixed.
How does it work?
Let’s say an investor buys a new government bond for US$100, and it pays a fixed US$5 interest payment every year. The yield on that investment is 5%.
Now imagine the economy slows and investors seek the perceived safety of government bonds. Demand increases, which pushes the price of the bond up to US$110 in the open market. The government is still only paying that same fixed US$5 a year. If a new investor buys the bond at US$110, the yield on that US$5 payment falls to about 4.5%.
The price went up, but the yield went down.
Conversely, if investors sell bonds to buy riskier assets, the price of the bond may drop to US$90. That same fixed US$5 payment now represents a higher yield of about 5.5%.
The price went down, but the yield went up.
INTERACTIVE PRICE vs YIELD SIMULATOR
Drag the slider to see how market demand mathematically shifts the yield.
Fixed Payout$5.00
Market Price$100
Current Yield5.00%
Mass Sell-off ($80)Panic Buying ($120)
MARKET STATUS: PAR VALUE (Baseline)
Two key Treasury yields traders often watch
Traders do not need to follow the entire bond market. Two US government bond yields often receive the most attention because they send different signals.
The US 2-year Treasury yield reflects the market’s near-term expectations for central bank policy. Because it matures in two years, it is highly sensitive to what traders believe the Federal Reserve may do with interest rates at upcoming meetings.
The US 10-year Treasury yield reflects the market’s view of longer-term economic growth, inflation and risk appetite. It is the benchmark borrowing rate for the global economy. When commentators say “yields are rising”, they are often referring to the 10-year yield.
The difference between yields across maturities is known as the yield curve. A changing yield curve can suggest shifts in expectations for growth, inflation and monetary policy.
What moves bond yields
Bond yields do not move in a vacuum. They respond to macroeconomic data, central bank signals, investor positioning and risk sentiment.
Understanding which force is currently driving the move can help traders avoid reacting only to the headline and start reading the context behind it.
What moves bond yields
Inflation expectations
Higher yields driven by inflation can weigh on gold, growth stocks and rate-sensitive assets.
↓ tap to expand
When inflation rises, or is expected to rise, investors may demand higher returns to compensate for the loss of purchasing power.
Yields may rise
When inflation data surprises to the upside or when markets expect central banks to keep rates higher for longer.
Yields may fall
When inflation cools, rate expectations ease or investors believe the inflation threat is becoming less persistent.
Fed and central bank policy
Fed expectations are one of the most important drivers of the 2-year yield and can flow directly into currency pairs, gold and equity indices.
↓ tap to expand
Central bank expectations are especially important for shorter-dated yields. The US 2-year Treasury yield often moves sharply when markets reprice the likely path of Federal Reserve policy.
Yields may rise
When the Fed signals rate hikes, delayed cuts or a higher-for-longer policy stance.
Yields may fall
When the Fed signals a possible pivot, slower inflation or weaker growth.
Economic growth outlook
The 10-year yield is often watched as a signal of long-run growth, inflation and market confidence.
↓ tap to expand
The 10-year yield is heavily influenced by the market’s view of long-term growth.
Yields may rise
When growth is strong and investors move from bonds into risk assets, pushing bond prices lower.
Yields may fall
When growth slows, recession fears rise or investors seek the perceived safety of government bonds.
Risk sentiment and safe-haven demand
Yield moves during stress periods can reflect positioning, liquidity and safe-haven demand, not just fundamentals.
↓ tap to expand
During periods of stress, bond yields can move in ways that appear to contradict the economic data.
Yields may rise
In a risk-on environment, investors may sell bonds and move into equities or other risk assets. That can push bond prices lower.
Yields may fall
In a risk-off environment, investors may buy government bonds for perceived safety. That can push bond prices higher.
Watch this, not just that
Do not just watch whether yields are rising or falling. Watch what is driving the move.
A yield rise driven by strong growth can carry a different message from a yield rise driven by sticky inflation. A yield fall caused by cooling inflation can also mean something different from a yield fall caused by panic buying during a market shock.
Three common bond yield scenarios to recognise
The scenarios below map a simple chain: macro catalyst, yield mechanism and potential asset impact.
Macro Catalyst
Inflation surprise
CPI or inflation data comes in hotter than expected.
Yield Mechanism
Yields rise
Markets price higher rates or longer restrictive policy
Asset Impact
Growth equities ↓Safe havens ↓USD pairs ↑
Macro Catalyst
Growth scare
Weak labour market data or rising recession concerns.
Yield Mechanism
Yields fall
Investors buy bonds for perceived safety
Asset Impact
Broad equities ↓Safe havens ↑Commodity FX ↓
Macro Catalyst
Fed repricing
Fed decision or data shifts future rate expectations.
Yield Mechanism
2-yr moves quickly
Highly sensitive to near-term policy
Asset Impact
Rate-sensitive assets ↕USD pairs ↕Commodity FX ↕
Common trap
Assuming a move in yields means the same thing every time.
The mistake is treating yields as a simple directional signal.
They are better read as a context signal. The same yield move can affect markets differently depending on whether it is driven by inflation, growth, Fed policy or risk sentiment.
How yields may affect markets you trade
Once traders understand what yields are and why they move, they can map the potential impact across their trading screens.
1. Gold (XAU/USD) Gold tends to move inversely with real yields, which are nominal yields adjusted for inflation. When real yields fall, gold may become more attractive because the opportunity cost of holding a zero-yield asset decreases. When real yields rise, gold can come under pressure because interest-bearing assets may become relatively more attractive.
2. Tech and growth stocks Higher yields increase the discount rate applied to future earnings. This can weigh on growth stocks because much of their expected value is tied to earnings that may arrive years from now. That is one reason the Nasdaq 100 is often described as rate-sensitive.
3. US dollar Higher US yields can attract foreign capital seeking better returns. That can increase demand for the US dollar, particularly when US yields are rising faster than yields in other major economies.
4. AUD/USD AUD/USD is sensitive to the interest rate differential between the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Federal Reserve. When US yields rise faster than Australian yields, the rate differential may favour the US dollar and weigh on AUD/USD.
Gold · XAU/USD
May weaken if real yields rise
↓
Tech & Growth
Valuation pressure increases
↓
US Dollar
May strengthen on yield gap
↑
AUD/USD
Rate differential favours USD
↓
Typical directional impacts when US yields rise. Tendencies, not guarantees.
When yields may deserve closer attention
Bond yields do not need to be monitored every minute. However, there are specific windows when yield moves may have a stronger influence on market pricing.
CPI releases: CPI can matter because it can quickly reprice expectations for inflation, real yields and Fed policy.
Federal Reserve meetings: Fed decisions, press conferences and forward guidance can directly reprice the short end of the yield curve.
Non-Farm Payrolls and jobs data: Strong employment can reduce expectations for near-term rate cuts. Weak jobs data can increase expectations for Fed easing. Both move USD significantly.
Major risk-off events: Geopolitical shocks, banking stress or sharp equity sell-offs can trigger sudden demand for perceived safe-haven assets, including US government bonds. In these periods, yields may fall quickly as bond prices rise, even if the underlying inflation backdrop has not changed.
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Key takeaway
The US dollar is not just another market input. It is one of the main reference points global markets keep coming back to.
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