What Happens to GBP/USD (FRED) When 10-Year Real Yields Turn Positive?
What happens when 10-year real yields turn positive after a prolonged negative period? Impact on gold, tech stocks, and risk assets.
How GBP/USD (FRED) Responds
Scenario Background
The 10-year real yield (TIPS yield, DFII10) represents the inflation-adjusted return on a 10-year Treasury. When this yield is negative, holders lose purchasing power over the bond's lifetime, which has historically supported gold, long-duration tech stocks, and other inflation-sensitive assets. A transition from negative to positive real yields marks a meaningful regime shift.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
10Y real yields were deeply negative from 2020-2022 (-1.0% to -1.5%), supporting extreme asset price appreciation. They turned positive in May 2022 and reached 2.6% in October 2023, the highest since 2008. This transition coincided with gold consolidation, bitcoin drawdowns, and growth-to-value rotation in equities. Pre-2008, real yields were routinely 2-4% positive. The post-2008 era of negative/near-zero real yields was historically unusual.
What to Watch For
- •10Y real yield above 1.5%
- •5Y real yield (DFII5) also positive
- •TIPS breakeven inflation declining
- •Gold consolidating or declining
- •Equity P/E multiples compressing
Other Assets When 10-Year Real Yields Turn Positive
Other Scenarios Affecting GBP/USD (FRED)
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