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Mohamed El-Erian Warns US Treasury Yields Poised To Hover Near 5% Through 2025, Maps Out Survival Strategy

Bonds

Kaustubh Bagalkote

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January 9, 2025

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Benzinga

U.S. Treasury yields continued their upward march as prominent economist Mohamed El-Erian predicts yields could remain elevated through 2025, highlighting persistent inflation concerns and shifting market dynamics.

What Happened: The 20-year Treasury yield reached 4.96%, while the 10-year Treasury yield was 4.66% on Wednesday, reflecting broader moves across fixed-income markets.

El-Erian, Chief Economic Advisor at Allianz, suggested on the social media platform X that the 10-year Treasury yield could “spend quite a bit of 2025 in the 4.75-5% range,” despite consistent inflows into fixed income from both domestic and international investors.

The yield trajectory comes amid uncertainty about the Federal Reserve’s rate path, particularly as markets digest potential policy shifts under the incoming administration. Recent Fed minutes revealed officials used variations of the word “uncertain” twelve times, according to Jeffrey Roach, chief economist at LPL Financial.

Speaking on CNBC, El-Erian downplayed concerns about inflation readings being “hotter than expected,” arguing that current inflation targets may be outdated. This perspective aligns with some Fed officials’ views that economic strength may not necessarily fuel inflationary pressures.

Larry Tentarelli, chief technical strategist at Blue Chip Daily Trend Report, expects the Federal Reserve to maintain current rates through early 2025. “Investors should expect no rate cuts in Q1 2025 and 10-year US Treasury yields in the 4.50 to 5.00% range,” he noted.

See Also: Dollar Hits 14-Month High, 30-Year Yields Near Critical Threshold As Trump Reportedly Mulls Economic Emergency Tariffs

Why It Matters: Markets showed mixed reactions to these developments. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE:SPY) and the Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) closed slightly lower, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average managed a modest 0.25% gain.

The yield environment suggests investors may need to adapt their strategies. El-Erian advocates for “bar-belled investment portfolios” and bottom-up, name-driven investing rather than broad market or thematic approaches in the volatile year ahead.

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Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.

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