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Iran strikes 85 U.S. military sites in the Gulf, sparking a global selloff in stocks and a spike in the price of oil

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EconomyFinance

The canary in the coal mine is singing as global bond selloff raises national debt concerns

Eleanor Pringle
By
Eleanor Pringle
Eleanor Pringle
Senior Reporter, Economics and Markets
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Eleanor Pringle
By
Eleanor Pringle
Eleanor Pringle
Senior Reporter, Economics and Markets
Down Arrow Button Icon
September 3, 2025, 6:23 AM ET
The US Treasury Department in Washington, DC, US, on Friday, May 31, 2024.
Investors are pulling back on government bonds globally, prompting questions about debt.Al Drago—Bloomberg/Getty Images
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  • Global long-term bond yields are surging, with U.S. 30-year Treasuries near 5% and U.K. gilts above 5.7%, as investors grow wary of mounting debt and political pressure on central banks. Safe-haven gold has hit a record $3,537, while economists told Fortune the bond market “can’t be primaried,” underscoring that investors will pull back if fiscal credibility deteriorates.

As traders head into the final leg of 2025 they are not doing so with overconfidence. In fact, if this week’s bond market is anything to go by, they’re nervous.

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U.S. 30-year Treasuries will open a breath away from 5% today, one of their highest levels this year, following a sharp uptick since the end of last month. While yields pushing higher is one sign of a selloff, another is trading activity. That too has ticked up, increasing approximately 19% year on year at the end of August, according to securities experts SIFMA.

But the upset isn’t confined to America alone. In Europe, French government bonds—obligations assimilables du Trésor or OATs—similarly spiked toward a 5% yield and sit at 4.49% at the time of writing, marking its highest run since 2009.

The U.K. is arguably feeling the sharpest end of the issue, with 30-year gilts pushing above 5.7%, their highest level since the spring of 1998.

Meanwhile, gold, the safe haven asset in times of economic upheaval, has hit a record price of $3,537.

One reason investors are drawing back from government debt is concerns over its sustainability. For years economists have been nervously watching the debt-to-GDP ratios of developed economies tip further out of balance, meaning nations aren’t generating the growth to keep up with the borrowing they have financed.

If that ratio tips too far out of balance, or if investors see no signs of governments addressing the issue, experts fear there will be a flight from government securities as buyers demand higher yield premiums in return for their debt purchases. This could prompt a range of outcomes, with either central banks forced to step in to ease money supply or political pressure mounting to the point of significant cost-cutting.

Investors won’t be cajoled by pressure from the Oval Office to continue buying either, said Desmond Lachman, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. He told Fortune in an exclusive interview last month: “A comment I think is great is: One thing about the bond markets is that they can’t be primaried. In bond markets, the money’s gonna move. People just want to protect their cash; they’re not afraid of being bullied by Trump if the numbers don’t add up.”

Deutsche Bank noted to clients this morning that the French deficit running at 5.6% to 5.8% of GDP in 2025, above the official 5.4% target, is fueling concerns around debt sustainability. Likewise in the U.K., Deutsche’s Jim Reid noted, the government has a £20 billion to £25 billion budget gap to fill by November, compounding questions about how seriously global governments are taking their spending.

The Fed question

The picture in the U.S. is slightly more complicated, but boils down to confidence in the fundamentals of America’s economy. As Reid notes: “Concerns around Fed independence also contributed to the bond market moves. A second court hearing began yesterday on whether President Trump can be temporarily barred from dismissing Fed governor Lisa Cook … Earlier, nearly 600 economists signed an open letter in Cook’s defense, while FHFA director Bill Pulte kept up accusations of mortgage fraud.

“Meanwhile, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent confirmed the search for Powell’s successor as Fed chair is already underway … In comments to Reuters, he stressed that the Fed ‘should remain independent,’ though he was quick to add that it has also ‘made a lot of mistakes.’”

With Bessent and Trump continuing to pressure the Fed for lower interest rates—and with economic data suggesting this may soon be appropriate—Treasury yields on the shorter end are lowering in anticipation of cheaper borrowing.

Five-year yields, for example, are at 3.74%, down significantly from earlier this year when they sat at more than 4.6%.

Goldman Sachs noted the widening of the gap between short- and long-term yields, writing to clients Friday: “Despite relative stability at the very front end of the U.S. curve, cut pricing in 2026 has continued to build alongside a rise in risk premium at the long end.”

Oxford Economics’ John Canavan echoed in a note yesterday: “Supply pressures also argue for continued upward pressure on term premiums. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has suggested the Treasury avoid increasing the size of long-end Treasury issuance unless rates move lower, but the Treasury still needs to raise much more than is maturing for the 10-year and bond auction cycles each month, even if the auction sizes remain steady.

“Market participants might be taking some comfort in a recent Congressional Budget Office forecast that the increase in tariffs will reduce deficits over the next 10 years by a total of around $4 trillion, but we think the effective tariff rate will be lower than that assumed by the CBO, which means the impact on deficits will be smaller. If deficits are larger than expected, the upward pressure on the term premium is likely to increase regardless of the specific monthly 10-year and bond auction sizes.”

Subscribe to Fortune Gulf Brief. Every Tuesday, this new newsletter delivers clear-eyed, authoritative intelligence on the deals, decisions, policies, and power shifts shaping one of the world’s most consequential regions, written for the people who need to act on it. Sign up here.
About the Author
Eleanor Pringle
By Eleanor PringleSenior Reporter, Economics and Markets
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Eleanor Pringle is an award-winning senior reporter at Fortune covering news, the economy, and personal finance. Eleanor previously worked as a business correspondent and news editor in regional news in the U.K. She completed her journalism training with the Press Association after earning a degree from the University of East Anglia.

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