The new 30‑year bond yield of 5.058% was the highest at any auction since 2007. Yet it came in below the 5.061% rate that traders had been pricing just before the deadline. Demand was stronger than expected, which pulled the final yield down a hair.
That small surprise hides a bigger story. Borrowing by governments and companies is climbing fast, and it is rewriting the math for long‑term bonds.
The Auction in Detail
The Treasury concluded the sale of the bonds at a yield of 5.058%. Earlier on the same day, those bonds had traded at 5.095% in the secondary market. The highest yield for outstanding 30‑year bonds this year touched 5.20%. By comparison, at the end of June 2026, 30‑year bonds yielded 4.82%.
In June 2026, they stood at 4.82%, meaning the latest auction marks a notable jump in just a few weeks. The rise reflects a broader repricing of long-term debt as investors adjust to persistent inflation and heavy government borrowing.
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On Bloomberg Television, PGIM Credit's co‑chief investment officer Gregory Peters said, "This is the beginning and not the end." He sees pressure building on long‑term yields.
Why Yields Are Rising
Two big forces are pushing long‑term rates up. First, governments and companies are borrowing more money than they have in years. Peters noted that corporate borrowing this year has exceeded $1 trillion, nearing a record, driven largely by the AI spending boom. Much of that cash is going into artificial intelligence infrastructure, which takes years to pay off.
Second, oil prices spiked earlier in the year. In March and April, oil prices hit multiyear highs due to the U.S. conflict with Iran, which boosted both actual and anticipated inflation. Although oil prices and inflation forecasts later eased, actual inflation stayed high, and oil prices climbed again this week after a ceasefire broke down.
An Oxford Economics analyst, John Canavan, pointed to the Fed's stance. Chairman Kevin Warsh, who led the June Fed meeting, has focused heavily on fighting inflation. "Fed Governor Warsh has leaned aggressively into the inflation side of the Fed's mandate, which I think has also helped with the 10‑year and 30‑year demand as investors view current yield levels as quite attractive if inflation gets pushed back to the Fed's 2% target," Canavan said.
In other words, if investors believe the Fed will get inflation down, today's yields start to look like a good deal.
What's Next for Bonds
Gregory Peters expects long‑term Treasury yields to keep rising. He also pointed out that the surge in corporate debt issuance, especially for AI-related infrastructure, is adding a steady stream of new supply that weighs on bond prices. This dynamic, combined with ongoing fiscal deficits, creates sustained upward pressure on long-term rates.
"You will see pressure on long‑end yields," Peters said. He added: "The longer this persists the more investors will adjust to that not maybe being enough."
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