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The bond market has been on a roller coaster ride this year. Here are 3 predictions for what comes next.

Jennifer Sor

4 min read

NYSE trader

CHARLY TRIBALLEAU/AFP via Getty Images
  • Bond yields have swung wildly in the first six months of Trump's presidency.

  • The roller coaster ride for yields has stemmed from concerns about tariffs and US debt.

  • Strategists at SocGen said are eyeing developments ahead for the bond market.

It's been a volatile year so far for the bond market, with deficit fears, tariff tantrums, and skittishness about foreign buyers, but there are still fresh developments ahead that could shake things up, Societe Generale said.

Strategists pointed to the handful of fits US bond investors have thrown so far this year, largely stemming from concern about President Donald Trump's tariff agenda and fears over the rising budget deficit in the US.

The worry is both that tariffs will raise inflation, which will keep interest rates high, and that the national debt is scaling to an unsustainable level. Both possibilities are making investors less willing to hold onto US Treasury bonds unless the government offers more attractive yields.

"The first six months of the Trump administration have rattled bond markets, putting pressure on the long end of yield curves," strategists wrote in a note on Friday. "A shift away from long bonds and dollar assets could continue, but this will not be a straightforward process."

Here are three things the bank sees coming next for the bond market.

The bond market could see a wave of new Treasurys being issued as the government borrows more money and the Fed continues quantitative tightening, a practice that reduces the amount of US government bonds held by the central bank.

Congress is expected to lift the federal debt ceiling sometime in August. Once the ceiling is raised, the Treasury Department will need to build back its account by issuing more nominal coupons, with it likely picking up the pace of issuance by February of next year, SocGen strategists estimated.

If the debt ceiling isn't lifted, the Treasury General Account could be "totally exhausted" by October, per SocGen's projection.

Chart showing SocGen's forecast for the Treasury General Account if the debt ceiling isn't lifted

The Treasury General Account funds could be depleted sometime in September or October if the debt ceiling isn't lifted, according to SocGen's analysis.SG Cross Asset Research/Rates, Haver

Investors, meanwhile, have appeared more cautious on Treasurys recently. Demand at the most recent 20-year government bond auction was weaker than expected, and foreign participation was the lowest in five years, according to Bank of America.

"Rising debt and QT will continue to flood the markets with bonds," the SocGen strategists wrote. "There is appetite, but a shift away from long bonds and dollar assets is becoming apparent."

SocGen fleshed out several scenarios for what could happen to the 2-year and 10-year US Treasury yields over the next four quarters. Here are the bank's forecasts for the 2-year and 10-year yields by the end of the fourth quarter of 2025: