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When higher yields start to bite

When higher yields start to bite. Canada CPI picks up in April. Pound firms as Burnham fears recede.

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Written by: Kevin FordGeorge Vessey
The Market Insights Team

USD: When higher yields start to bite

Section written by: Kevin Ford

The macro backdrop is starting to shift in a way markets can’t ignore. The Trump–Xi meeting delivered little beyond optics, especially on Iran, leaving geopolitical risks simmering while oil pushes higher and keeps inflation pressure alive. At the same time, 10-year yields across the US, UK and Japan have broken higher in unison, unwinding ranges that held for months or even years. Equities have brushed it off so far, supported by a strong earnings season, but that cushion is fading. As earnings roll behind us, the focus is drifting back to macro, where inflation expectations are creeping higher and financial conditions are tightening through rates rather than policy.

History shows that markets can tolerate rising yields for longer than expected, until they can’t. In 1987, equities surged through the first half of the year even as bond yields and rate expectations moved higher, before confidence cracked abruptly into October. The late 1990s followed a slower burn: the Fed took policy rates up to restrictive levels into 2000, while long yields held high, yet equities kept rallying on productivity gains and strong earnings narratives, until the peak finally gave way. The common thread is not simply higher yields, but the moment when higher yields start to undermine the equity story investors are relying on.

That brings the focus to financial conditions. Policy does not need to hit an exact level to become restrictive; it becomes restrictive when the combination of rates, spreads, and liquidity begins to slow activity enough to pressure earnings and demand. Economists often frame this through the idea of a neutral rate, where policy above that level restrains growth, even if the exact number is hard to pin down in real time. In practical terms, the tipping point tends to come when higher real yields compress valuations, while the consumer, especially lower-income cohorts, starts to feel the squeeze from energy and inflation. That dynamic looks increasingly relevant now, with inflation expectations drifting higher at the same time as yields rise.

Chart of US yields, inflation

For the USD, the signal is not straightforward yet. Strong risk appetite and solid earnings have prevented the dollar from fully reflecting higher US yields, while rising rates abroad have diluted the usual relative advantage. But if financial conditions tighten further and equities begin to roll as the earnings impulse fades, the dollar’s defensive characteristics should reassert themselves. The path higher may not be linear, especially with global yield moves sharing the load, but in a scenario where macro takes over from earnings, the bias for the USD still points higher.

The rates market is reinforcing that view. Forward pricing for US policy has shifted higher, particularly in the one-year, one-year horizon, pointing to a more persistent inflation regime than markets had been assuming since the start of the war. That matters beyond valuations. When inflation is being driven by commodities and supply-side shocks, the adjustment process tends to be uneven and disruptive, with capital gravitating back toward the dollar as volatility rises. In that sense, the recent disconnect between higher US yields and a still-rangebound USD looks increasingly fragile. If the combination of elevated forward rates, tighter financial conditions, and commodity-driven price pressures starts to bite simultaneously, the transition from an earnings-led market to a macro-dominated one is unlikely to be smooth.

Chart of USD index and 1yr forward swaps

CAD: Canada CPI picks up in April

Section written by: Kevin Ford

Canada’s Consumer Price Index rose 2.8% year over year in April, up from 2.4% in March. The monthly gain was 0.4%, or 0.3% on a seasonally adjusted basis. In other words, inflation picked up, but the month-to-month pace stayed fairly contained.

Energy did most of the heavy lifting. Energy prices climbed 19.2% year over year, with gasoline up a sharp 28.6%. A big part of that is a base-year effect: the April 2025 drop tied to the removal of the consumer carbon levy has now rolled out of the 12‑month window, which mechanically pushes the annual rate higher. Add in supply uncertainty linked to the Middle East conflict and the switch to a pricier summer blend, and the move makes sense, even with the temporary federal fuel excise tax suspension starting April 20.

Still, the rest of the basket looked calmer. Excluding gasoline, CPI rose 2.0% year over year, easing from 2.2% in March. Travel tours flipped from a big increase to an 11.0% decline, which helped cool the headline. Rent inflation also slowed to 3.6% year over year, although rents are still up 30.8% since April 2021, so affordability pressure has not gone away.

Regionally, price growth accelerated in nine provinces, with Quebec at 3.0% year over year. British Columbia was the outlier, holding at 2.5%, and that partly reflects a notable slowdown in rent growth there.

In markets, the softer-than-expected tone helped keep the Canadian dollar on the back foot as the US dollar stayed bid, and USD/CAD pushed above the 1.3720–1.3730 congestion zone where the 50‑ and 100‑day moving averages meet. It is trading near 1.377 now, with the next clear upside level around the 200‑day near 1.381; clearing that would look more like a re‑trend inside the familiar 1.35–1.39 range, while a stall could bring a pullback as positioning catches up. That said, markets are still expecting the Bank of Canada to cut at least once this year, by the October meeting.

CPI picks up in April

GBP: Pound firms as Burnham fears recede

Section written by: George Vessey

Sterling outperformed on Monday, strengthening against all major peers despite a broad global bond sell‑off weighing on risk assets. The move appeared sterling‑specific, driven by a partial unwinding of the political risk premium that had built around the prospect of an Andy Burnham leadership challenge.

Concerns had escalated last week after Burnham, who must first win a June by‑election to be eligible to stand, reiterated support for higher public borrowing, unsettling gilt markets and dragging GBP/USD from the high‑1.36s into the 1.33 area. However, those fears eased after Burnham clarified that he would adhere to existing fiscal rules if he were to become prime minister. That reassurance stabilised UK assets, with gilt yields falling modestly across the curve and sterling retracing part of last week’s losses. GBP/USD has moved back above 1.34, while GBP/EUR has reclaimed the 1.15 handle, with both pairs tentatively back above their 200‑day moving averages.

Chart of GBPEUR

That said, UK political uncertainty is far from resolved. A full leadership contest is likely to play out over the summer, and the lack of clarity around potential outcomes is likely to keep some investors cautious toward UK assets.

Monetary policy remains a parallel constraint. The Bank of England (BoE) faces a familiar dilemma: persistent inflation pressures alongside a cooling labour market. Today’s jobs report showed unemployment edging up to 5% and a 100k drop in payroll employment in April, reinforcing signs of easing labour demand, even as headline earnings surprised to the upside. For markets, attention now turns to tomorrow’s inflation data, though the bar to meaningfully unwind expectations for a relatively tight BoE policy path remains high.

Chart of UK payrolls

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