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With the 10-Year Treasury yield creeping up to 4.59% YTD, the macro landscape is shifting fast. Meanwhile, the S&P 500 is sitting up roughly 8%.

When you factor in equity risk, that gap is closing in a hurry.

For over a decade, investors had TINA (There Is No Alternative). Now, we have a very real alternative. It begs the question: At what yield do institutional investors aggressively rotation out of equities and into "risk-free" paper?

Consider the math

10-Year Yield: 4.59% (Guaranteed, zero volatility)

S&P 500 YTD: ~8% (With full market volatility and downside risk)

If the 10-Year ticks up to 4.75% or crosses the psychological 5.00% barrier, the "Equity Risk Premium" starts looking incredibly thin. Why chase an 8-9% variable return in stocks when you can lock in nearly 5% completely risk-free?

The higher this yield creeps, the heavier the gravity becomes on equity valuations.

What’s your line in the sand? At what yield do you start heavying up on bonds? 👇

May 15
at
9:29 PM
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