Bond markets are becoming Trump’s guard rail on war

Global bond markets are sending a message to the White House, and it’s one that cannot be ignored. This comes even as President Donald Trump hails “productive” talks with Iran aimed at ending the conflict, signalling a potential diplomatic off-ramp. Yet despite this, markets remain unconvinced that tensions will ease quickly. As tensions escalate between the US and Iran, investors aren’t responding in the way many would […]The article Bond markets are becoming Trump’s guard rail on war appeared first on Arabian Post.

Bond markets are becoming Trump’s guard rail on war
Nigel Investment Adivice Arabian Post DeVereNigel Investment Adivice Arabian Post DeVere

Nigel Investment Adivice Arabian Post DeVere

Global bond markets are sending a message to the White House, and it’s one that cannot be ignored.

This comes even as President Donald Trump hails “productive” talks with Iran aimed at ending the conflict, signalling a potential diplomatic off-ramp. Yet despite this, markets remain unconvinced that tensions will ease quickly.

As tensions escalate between the US and Iran, investors aren’t responding in the way many would expect during a geopolitical crisis.

There’s been no broad flight into the safety of government debt. Instead, bond markets are selling off aggressively. Yields are rising across the world. Borrowing costs are climbing in real time.

This is not background noise. It’s a constraint on President Trump.

Oil has surged above $110 a barrel, driven by threats to critical energy infrastructure and the possibility of disruption in the Strait of Hormuz. At the same time, global equity markets have fallen sharply.

Under normal conditions, that combination would trigger a rally in government bonds as investors seek safety. But right now this is not happening.

US 10-year Treasury yields have pushed to multi-month highs. In the UK, 10-year gilt yields have moved above 5% for the first time since the global financial crisis.

European bond markets are following the same path. Prices are falling, yields are rising, and the repricing is broad-based and fast.

Bond markets are reacting to one dominant force: inflation risk.

Higher oil and gas prices are feeding directly into expectations that inflation will remain elevated for longer.

This is forcing a rapid reassessment of central bank policy. Expectations for rate cuts have been scaled back or abandoned entirely. In some cases, markets are beginning to price in the possibility of further tightening.

This matters because bond markets sit at the core of the financial system. They determine the cost of capital for governments, businesses and households. When yields rise sharply, financial conditions tighten. Growth slows. Fiscal flexibility shrinks.

And that’s where the geopolitical dimension becomes critical.

The United States enters this period from a position of relative energy strength. Domestic production and reserves provide a buffer against immediate supply shocks, which has contributed to the divergence between Brent crude, which reflects global seaborne risk, and WTI, which is more insulated.

But that insulation has limits.

The US economy is deeply interconnected with global demand and capital flows. A sustained rise in global energy prices does not remain contained overseas. It feeds back into inflation, into financial markets, and ultimately into domestic economic conditions.

Bond markets are already reflecting that reality.

Rising Treasury yields signal that investors are demanding higher compensation to hold US debt in an environment of elevated inflation and geopolitical uncertainty. The move is not trivial.

It tightens financial conditions at a time when the economy is already navigating high borrowing costs.

The political implications are immediate.

Trump has warned of further escalation, including potential large-scale strikes on Iranian infrastructure if key shipping routes are not reopened. Iran has signalled it will respond in kind, targeting energy and water facilities across the region.

Markets are watching closely, and reacting quickly.

Each escalation in rhetoric and action pushes oil prices higher, reinforces inflation expectations, and drives yields upward. Each move in yields raises the cost of financing government debt and increases pressure on the broader economy.

This creates a feedback loop.

Escalation drives higher energy prices. Higher energy prices drive higher yields. Higher yields tighten financial conditions and increase economic risk. That, in turn, raises the cost of further escalation.

Bond markets are not making political decisions, but they are imposing economic consequences.

The scale of the US debt burden amplifies this effect. With trillions in outstanding obligations, even modest increases in yields translate into significantly higher interest costs over time. At the same time, a large share of US assets is held by overseas investors, whose confidence is sensitive to both financial and geopolitical developments.

If that confidence wavers, the adjustment in yields could accelerate.

This is where bond markets begin to act as a form of guard rail.

They don’t prevent escalation directly, but they shape the cost-benefit calculation. A prolonged or intensified conflict that drives energy prices higher will not only impact global markets; it’ll feed directly into US borrowing costs, financial conditions, and economic stability.

There are already signs of this constraint emerging.

The repricing in rate expectations has been swift. The move in yields has been sharp. Traditional safe-haven dynamics have broken down, with bonds falling alongside equities rather than offsetting risk.

This is the market signalling that inflation risk now outweighs safety demand.

It’s becoming increasingly clear that further escalation carries immediate and measurable economic consequences. It tightens the financial environment, it raises the cost of debt, and it increases pressure on households and businesses through higher borrowing costs.

None of this occurs in isolation.

Global bond markets are moving together. The UK, Europe and the US are all experiencing rising yields. The UK, in particular, is at the sharp end, with gilt yields above 5% and significant losses in bond portfolios. But the underlying driver is shared.

Energy shock is becoming financial shock.

The US may begin from a stronger position than many of its peers, but it is not immune to the dynamics now unfolding.

The bond market is making that clear.

In previous crises, government bonds provided a cushion. Today, they are transmitting pressure.

That shift changes the equation.

It means that escalation is no longer just a geopolitical decision. It is an economic one, with immediate consequences priced into markets.

Bond markets are not passive observers in this environment. They’re active participants, and their message is unmistakable. Push further, and the cost rises—fast.

And that, it would appear, is acting as a potential ‘safety net’ against Trump’s more aggressive instincts.

Nigel Green is deVere CEO and Founder

 

The article Bond markets are becoming Trump’s guard rail on war appeared first on Arabian Post.

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