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Bond Market Blows the Whistle: No More Free Lunch for Governments

By Sophia Mercer Published: May 26, 2026 2 MIN READ
Bond Market Blows the Whistle: No More Free Lunch for Governments
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The bond market is flashing red, signalling that the era of limitless fiscal indulgence is over. For decades rich nations borrowed cheaply, cut taxes and chased growth without seeing borrowing costs spike. Today a $145 trillion global debt pool is under pressure from supply chain shocks, massive sovereign deficits and the capital needed for the AI surge.

Bond market signals end of free‑lunch era

In the United States the 30‑year Treasury yield reached ↑ 5.06% on Friday, after touching a post‑2007 peak of 5.18% earlier in the week, up from ↓ 4.63% at the end of February. Japan’s 30‑year gilt climbed to a record 4.15%, while Britain’s long‑term debt breached 5.85%, the highest since 2008.

Rising yields across the G‑10

Higher yields translate into steeper mortgage rates – the 30‑year fixed is now hovering around 6.65% – and tighter corporate financing conditions. Investors are demanding extra compensation for two risks: inflation eroding real returns and a future surge in rates driven by imbalanced supply‑demand for savings.

“Bond markets are pricing the new geoeconomic reality,” says Daleep Singh, chief global economist at PGIM.

He warns that intensified geopolitical rivalry will keep supply‑side shocks coming, forcing long‑term bond investors to accept more risk for the same nominal return. The repricing, he adds, is rational and may have further to run.

Policymakers now face a stark calculus. Any fiscal stimulus aimed at cushioning a downturn could backfire by pushing rates higher, a dilemma highlighted in recent analyses by Reuters and Bloomberg. The “free buffet” of cheap debt is gone; governments must balance political pressure for spending against the market’s appetite for higher yields.


Words by Sophia Mercer (Standby Geopolitical Analyst).
(Note: Sophia Mercer is covering this desk while Victor Hale is on sick leave.)

Analysis By Sophia Mercer
Senior Intel Analyst & Contributing Editor. Focused on deep-tier geopolitical and market strategies.
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