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War Premium Returns to Wall Street: Two-Year Treasury Yields Hit a 17-Month High as Iran Strikes Resume

Joe Weisenthal
Last updated: 13.07.2026 19:04
Joe Weisenthal
13 часов ago
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War Premium Returns to Wall Street: Two-Year Treasury Yields Hit a 17-Month High as Iran Strikes Resume
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Treasury two-year yields climbed as much as three basis points to 4.24% on Monday, their highest level since February 2025, as renewed fighting between the US and Iran pushed oil prices sharply higher and revived speculation that the Federal Reserve will need to raise interest rates to contain inflation. The benchmark 10-year yield added three basis points to 4.59%, while Brent crude jumped more than 4% after the two sides exchanged fresh strikes over the weekend, with conflicting statements emerging over whether the Strait of Hormuz remains open to shipping. KeyToFinancialTrends reads the size of the two-year move, small in absolute terms but large enough to mark a 17-month high, as evidence that bond markets are treating this specific flare-up as more than a repeat of prior on-again, off-again skirmishes: rate-sensitive short-dated yields react most sharply to changes in near-term Fed expectations, and Monday's jump suggests traders now see a meaningfully higher chance of a hike materializing sooner rather than later.

That repricing shows up starkly in derivatives markets. Traders are now almost fully pricing in a Fed rate hike at the September meeting, up from roughly a 66% probability just a week earlier, according to swaps data compiled by Bloomberg. "Markets are slightly more sensitive to the Iran headlines at the moment," said Kenneth Crompton, head of rates strategy at National Australia Bank in Sydney, adding that while markets aren't pricing a return to the conflict intensity seen in March, continued attacks over the weekend, along with strikes on Russian refining capacity, have left "a bit of wariness creeping back" into positioning. KeyToFinancialTrends reads that jump from 66% to near-certainty in just a week as the more informative number than the yield move itself: options and swaps pricing tends to move faster and more decisively than cash bond yields when conviction shifts, and a probability repricing this sharp suggests traders aren't simply hedging tail risk but actively repositioning around a hike as their base case.

The timing compounds an already data-heavy week for rate expectations. This week brings the final US inflation prints, consumer and producer price data due Tuesday, before the Fed's July 27-28 meeting, with both headline and core CPI expected to have eased slightly in June while remaining well above the central bank's 2% target, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists. Key To Financial Trends treats the collision of an energy-driven yield spike with an already-anticipated inflation report as a genuinely awkward setup for the Fed: even a modestly cooler-than-expected CPI print this week could be overshadowed almost immediately if oil prices keep climbing on Iran-related headlines, since energy costs feed into headline inflation with a very short lag compared with the core services components the Fed usually weighs more heavily.

Fed Chair Kevin Warsh is scheduled to make his first congressional appearance since taking the helm later this week, after previously pledging to scale back the kind of forward guidance on future rate moves that has characterized recent FOMC communications. Westpac's head of fixed-income research, Damien McColough, wrote that the trading range for 10-year yields may be capped near 4.70%, though that level "has the potential to be tested in coming days if the inflation data is less than benign," while adding that his desk remains biased toward selling rallies as uncertainty around the US-Iran situation shifts from an acute crisis into what looks increasingly like a mid-term political and economic overhang. KeyToFinancialTrends closes on that framing as the most useful lens for the weeks ahead: markets are no longer treating the Iran conflict purely as an episodic shock to be priced and then forgotten, but as a recurring input that keeps resetting the Fed's rate-hike odds every time hostilities resume, regardless of how the underlying domestic inflation data behaves in isolation.

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