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Scenario × Asset Analysis

What Happens to Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) When 30-Year Treasury Yields Surge?

What happens when 30-year Treasury yields surge above 5%? Bond market stress, fiscal concerns, and equity multiple compression.

Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad)
118.86
as of Apr 10, 2026
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Trigger: 30Y Treasury Yield
4.90%
Condition: rises above 5%
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How Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad) Responds

Dollar typically strengthens as global capital seeks US yields, unless fiscal concerns dominate.

Scenario Background

The 30-year Treasury yield represents long-duration borrowing costs for the US government and serves as the benchmark for 30-year mortgages, corporate bonds, and long-dated interest rate derivatives. A surge above 5% signals market concern about fiscal sustainability, long-term inflation expectations, or Fed credibility.

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Historical Context

The 30Y yield averaged 6-8% in the 1990s, reached 14% in 1981, and fell to a record low of 0.99% in March 2020. The 2022-2024 cycle saw 30Y yields rise from 1.0% to 5.1% in October 2023, the fastest rise in modern history. The last sustained period above 5% was 2007. Prior to the Great Financial Crisis, 5%+ was common; post-crisis it was exceptional until 2023. The 30Y-3M spread hitting record inversions during 2022-2024 reflected market concern about near-term Fed policy more than long-term con...

What to Watch For

  • Term premium estimates rising sharply
  • 30Y auction tail sizes widening
  • Foreign central bank Treasury holdings declining
  • MOVE Index (Treasury volatility) above 130
  • 30Y-10Y spread steepening aggressively (bear steepener)

Other Assets When 30-Year Treasury Yields Surge

Other Scenarios Affecting Trade-Weighted Dollar (Broad)

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