Investors are demanding the highest compensation in months to hold U.S. government debt, and Friday's jobs report will determine whether the sell-off accelerates.
Investors are demanding the highest compensation in months to hold U.S. government debt, and Friday's jobs report will determine whether the sell-off accelerates.

Investors are demanding the highest compensation in months to hold U.S. government debt, and Friday's jobs report will determine whether the sell-off accelerates.
The 10-year Treasury yield pushed back toward 4.5% this week as a three-month sell-off accelerated, leaving the bond market vulnerable to Friday's nonfarm payrolls report for its next directional cue.
"The market is pricing in a scenario where the economy refuses to slow down enough for the Fed to cut," said James Okafor, rates strategist at Edgen. "Every strong data point reinforces the higher-for-longer narrative and pushes yields higher."
The 10-year yield stood at 4.47% Thursday, up from 4.20% a month ago and approaching the 4.5% threshold breached in April after stronger-than-expected jobs data. The 2-year yield climbed to 4.18%, while the 30-year bond yield touched 4.97%, near its highest since October. The sell-off has lifted the Bloomberg U.S. Treasury Index yield to 4.6%, erasing gains from the first quarter.
A stronger-than-expected payrolls number could push the 10-year yield decisively above 4.5%, extending a rout that has already wiped out an estimated $400 billion in Treasury market value since March. A miss, by contrast, could trigger a sharp rally as investors who have been short duration scramble to cover positions. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg expect 185,000 jobs added in May, with the unemployment rate holding at 3.9%.
The bond market's fragility reflects a deeper structural concern. The U.S. government is issuing debt at a pace that increasingly tests investor appetite. Net issuance of Treasuries is projected to reach $2.1 trillion this year, according to the Congressional Budget Office, as the federal deficit runs at 6.2% of GDP. The Economist recently described the Treasury market as "decaying," warning that high debt, disjointed markets and pugnacious trade policy all threaten the world's safe asset.
The last time the 10-year yield breached 4.5% in April, it followed a payrolls report that showed 303,000 jobs added — well above the 214,000 consensus. The yield subsequently retreated as softer retail sales and consumer confidence data revived rate-cut expectations. That pattern of data-dependent whipsaw has become the defining feature of a market that cannot find a stable equilibrium.
A separate tailwind for yields has come from the commodity complex. Crude oil prices have risen 12% over the past month, with WTI trading near $92 a barrel, adding to inflation concerns that complicate the Fed's path. Higher energy costs feed directly into headline CPI, which stood at 3.4% in April — still more than a full percentage point above the Fed's 2% target. The combination of sticky inflation and resilient labor markets has pushed the market-implied probability of a September rate cut to 48%, down from 68% a month ago, according to CME FedWatch data.
The stakes for Friday's release go beyond the immediate yield move. A print above 250,000 would mark the 14th consecutive month of above-trend job growth and likely push the 10-year yield through 4.5%, potentially triggering a broader risk-off move that would pressure equities. The S&P 500 has already lost 1.8% this week as rate-sensitive sectors like real estate and utilities led declines. A print below 150,000, by contrast, would revive the narrative of a cooling labor market and could send the 10-year yield back toward 4.2% in a single session.
The Federal Reserve's next policy decision is June 18, and Chair Jerome Powell has emphasized that the committee needs "greater confidence" that inflation is moving sustainably toward 2% before cutting rates. Friday's data will shape whether that confidence materializes — or whether the wait extends further into the second half of the year.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.