As the Federal Reserve injects billions into the U.S. Treasury market to absorb record debt issuance, BlackRock’s Rick Rieder warns that the real upside remains in stocks.
Fed’s Quiet Bond Accumulation
“The Federal Reserve is loading up on US Treasuries,” noted The Kobeissi Letter, citing FRED data, revealing that the central bank has purchased $237 billion in Treasuries since December.
This massive intervention acts as a necessary shock absorber against an unrelenting flood of government debt. Rieder, BlackRock’s Chief Investment Officer of Global Fixed Income, highlighted this intense pressure, noting the bond market is grappling with “$520 billion a week of trade of gross supply of Treasuries.”
Stark Market Disconnect
Despite the central bank’s implicit support of the bond market, Rieder sees far more potential for investors elsewhere. “Equities have a whole lot more upside than… interest rates do today,” he stated in a Bloomberg interview.
Rieder attributes this disconnect to vastly different supply-and-demand technicals. While the bond market is drowning in new issuance, the stock market faces a structural shortage.
“We don’t create enough stocks,” Rieder explained, pointing out that corporate share buybacks drastically outpace initial public offerings. Combined with immense sideline cash, this creates a relentless bid for equities.
Navigating A Fractured Economy
Underpinning this market dynamic is a deeply divided U.S. economy. While traditional manufacturing and housing are effectively “in recession,” Rieder notes the broader economy is steaming ahead, fueled by massive AI investments and resilient high-income consumption.
Because these rate-sensitive, lower-income sectors are struggling, Rieder anticipates the Fed will eventually cut rates. However, he remains cautious about extending the duration in bonds just yet.
While he predicts the 10-year Treasury yield will eventually fall to 4%, BlackRock intends to wait in the “belly of the yield curve” until real motivation around lowering mortgage rates materializes.
Change In 10-Year Treasury Yields Over 15 Years
Based on the data from the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, here are the percentage changes in 10-year Treasury yields as of May 4, 2026, when the yield was 4.45%.
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