Bond market cycles last a long time. For example there was a bond bull market from 1920-1946 when long term U.S. Treasury yields declined from 6% to 2.3%. Thereafter a 35 year bear market ensued to September 1981 which took the yield on 10-Year U.S. Treasury Bonds to 15.84%. This was followed by a 39 year bull market that ended in August 2020 with the 10-Year U.S. Treasury yield trading at a meager 0.56%. It seems clear to me that with the 10-Year bond closing this week at 4.76%, we have been in a bond bear market for over four years.
Thus if history is any guide, we are only the the early stages of a bear market that could last another two decades. Of course, as in any bear market, there will be rallies along the way, the the path for yields will be decidedly upward.
The fundamentals underpinning the bear market include monumental budget deficits throughout most of the world's largest economies, unfunded pension plans, a still smoldering inflation, and, at least in the near term, the global electorate's preference for populist politics that is working to deglobalize the world economy. Further, if you add to the mix the need for enormous expenditures to harden infrastructure for weather events and the costs associated with energy transition, all the forces are in place for higher inflation and higher yields.
As far as the stock market goes, stocks can and have risen in the early stages of a bond bear market. That certainly has happened over the last four years. However, as high interest rates begin to bite, the stock market will no longer have a bond bull market at its back to support a near record price-earnings ratio for the broad market.
The views outlined here are consistent with an earlier blog in 2022 outlining the prevalence of 13-year cycles. (See: https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2022/05/the-useconomy-is-entering-new-thirteen.html) Also see my recent short term outlook (https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2024/12/2025-revenge-of-bond-vigilantes.html)
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