Bond Traders’ Big Bet for 2026 Vindicated by Soft US Job Growth

Bond Traders’ Big Bet for 2026 Vindicated by Soft US Job Growth

Bond Traders’ Big Bet for 2026 Vindicated by Soft US Job Growth

<p>Photographer: Jamie Kelter Davis/Bloomberg</p>

Photographer: Jamie Kelter Davis/Bloomberg

Bond investors’ overarching wager on the path of the Federal Reserve and the Treasuries market in 2026 looks like it has room to run.

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A much-anticipated employment report on Friday showed job growth was below forecasts last month, leaving intact expectations for additional Fed interest-rate cuts to support the economy. The result confirmed confidence in bets that short-maturity Treasuries, which are the most sensitive to the central bank’s policy, will outpace their longer-term counterparts this year, widening the yield gap between those maturities.

The steepener trade, as the position is dubbed, was one of the hottest bond strategies for much of 2025, drawing in fixed-income giant Pimco, among others, and it worked to start 2026 as well. The gap between 2- and 10-year Treasury yields reached the largest in almost nine months last week.

“We’re longer-term investors, and over the next 12 to 24 months there’s a lot of scenarios where a steepener is going to work out well,” said Pramod Atluri, a fixed-income portfolio manager at Capital Group.

The jobs report capped an eventful stretch for the strategy. Traders were also on alert Friday for a possible Supreme Court ruling on challenges to President Donald Trump’s tariffs. As it turned out, the court didn’t issue an opinion. But a potential decision against Trump is expected to put pressure on Treasuries given the revenue the levies generate. Investors also absorbed Trump’s request that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac buy $200 billion in mortgage bonds.

Inflation Hurdle

For data, the focus turns to Tuesday, with the release of December consumer-price figures. The report is projected to show that inflation remained elevated, backing the case for the Fed to pause.

After three rate cuts by the central bank since September, traders see the next reduction in mid-2026, with another to follow in the fourth quarter. Changing expectations around that timing will continue to buffet bets on a wider yield-curve gap.

For Subadra Rajappa, head of US rates strategy at Societe Generale, momentum for the trade is waning.

“I don’t see much room for the curve to continue to steepen,” she said. “A stable labor market and sticky inflation argue for fewer cuts.”

Of note, Friday’s report also showed the jobless rate fell in December. That wiped out considerations of a rate cut this month and caused the curve wager to unwind some. The difference between 2- and 10-year yields shrank to its smallest since year-end.

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