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Bessent Says The Bond Selloff Is Temporary. The Market Isn't So Sure.

Published May 26, 2026
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Summary:
  • The 10-year Treasury yield has climbed to its highest level since January 2025.
  • Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent says elevated yields and headline inflation are "transient" and will fade as the Iran conflict winds down.
  • Bessent's actual policy tools are limited to Treasury auction composition and advocating for spending cuts.

Scott Bessent's whole job pitch was simple - get long-term borrowing costs down. The bond market has not been cooperative.

Yields keep climbing, and the Treasury secretary's tool kit is thinner than the title suggests.

What He Can Actually Do

Bessent can shape the mix of short-term Treasury bills versus long-term bonds the government sells, and he can lobby Congress for tighter spending. That's basically the list.

What he cannot do is set the Fed's interest rate, move inflation expectations on demand, or stop foreign buyers from rotating out of U.S. bonds when they want to.

Vishal Khanduja at Morgan Stanley Investment Management has called Bessent a "volatility seller," meaning a Treasury secretary who steps in to calm sharp moves in markets like Treasuries, the yen, and Argentina's peso. Calming a yield trend that's been building for months is a different job entirely.

Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down what bond moves like this mean for your money in five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you join.

The "Transient" Bet

In a Reuters interview from Paris last week, Bessent said high yields and headline inflation are "transient" and will subside once the Iran conflict winds down.

His logic leans on oil markets that already see through the conflict, with Brent crude for July delivery at $105 a barrel but December delivery priced at just $88. Traders are essentially pricing in a resolution by year-end.

If Iran ends sooner, energy prices fall and bond yields likely follow. If it drags on, the "transient" story falls apart.

Why This Matters For Investors

Rising yields drag on everything - mortgages, corporate debt, and the stock market, since investors can earn more from "risk-free" government bonds. For more on how the Fed and Treasury actually drive the cost of money, see our Fed explainer.

It also limits what the White House can do, because every basis-point move higher costs the government more to service its debt.

What To Watch

The 10-year hit 4.671% last week, the highest since January 2025, while the 30-year touched 5.178%, the highest since June 2007.

A 100 basis-point drop in 10-year yields would save the government roughly $1 trillion in interest costs, a figure Bessent himself has cited.

That's the prize, and hoping Iran wraps up quickly is the plan.

The bond market wants to see more than that.

For the kind of macro context that actually helps investors, sign up for Market Briefs delivered every weekday morning, with a free 45-minute investing course included when you join.

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