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For decades, Treasurys were the one asset that required no explanation. They served as the ballast for portfolios, the comparative benchmark for everything else, and the ultimate sign of safety in an uncertain world. If clients ever asked why they held Treasurys, the answer was "because they are risk-free," and the conversation could move on.
That level of comfort is on the downswing. This isn’t because the U.S. won't pay, but because the market is starting to question how it will pay.
Yields on the bond market have incrementally adjusted to introduce a new variable: a fiscal premium. Yet, this is not a new form of risk; it represents a new form of information. Investors still believe they will get repaid; they just believe they are entitled to a higher return to facilitate it.
The Numbers Have Changed
In 2020, the U.S. spent about $350 billion a year just on interest for our debts. By 2025, we're projected to exceed $1.2 trillion. Even if rates float back down, debt servicing will be nearly as high as projected defense spending. In fact, the only budget item exceeding debt service in the next few years is Social Security.
It's not cyclical; it's structural. Deficits are at nearly 6% of GDP, despite low unemployment and positive growth. In the past, that level of deficit spending was typically associated with deep recessions or emergency spending efforts. Today, it's the status quo.
It's not that America will go bankrupt; it’s that America continually rolls over trillions of dollars of debt that matures daily — and at higher rates. Each refinancing auction comes faster and costs more than the last. Investors know it and want to be compensated for assuming the risk that Washington's math is only getting trickier.
The Market Is Paying Attention
For decades, the long end of the Treasury curve followed the Fed; now, it follows the Treasury. Every few weeks, one auction or another tests just how much demand is left for duration. Since the pandemic hit, the major players have faded in and out of sight. The Fed isn’t buying. Banks aren't buying. Foreign central banks have stepped back. This leaves the market itself to absorb incredible amounts of supply, and it's setting its terms.
That’s essentially what a fiscal premium is. It’s not a fear of default; it's a whisper of a repricing for credibility. When buyers request a little extra yield to own the so-called "safest" asset on Earth, they do not think repayment will falter; instead, they are second-guessing the discipline behind it.
This explains why yields have remained stubbornly high even as inflation has come down and the Fed has started to pivot. The bond market is not responding to Powell's next move; it's responding to Washington's mathematical output.
What This Means for Advisors
For advisors, this information matters because it recontextualizes duration and risk. When explaining yields to clients today, inflation and Fed policy constitute part of the equation; however, fiscal considerations now also play an important part. The size of Treasury issuance, the shape of deficits, and the speed at which debt matures all play into the yield the market demands to accept long bonds.
That's not to say Treasurys are dangerous — they still serve as the global benchmark. It simply means there's no longer an absence of politics in determining what's risk-free (and thus, what interest payments should be).
From a portfolio construction perspective, this bolsters why the five- to seven-year section of the curve looks increasingly attractive. It provides income without tethering client portfolios to uncertainty at the long end, and it gives advisors decent yield without having to bet on fiscal reforms that may take years to materialize.
Credibility Is the New Anchor
Markets exist on confidence. For most of the past half-century, confidence was based on consistent, policy-based endeavors: The Fed handled inflation, and the Treasury took care of issuance. Those lines are now blurred.
The fiscal premium is simply the market’s way of reinstating boundaries: “We trust you to pay us back; we'd just like a little more yield in case your math doesn't get better.” It demonstrates confidence, not panic. It's price discovery.
At the same time, such discipline is inadvertently healthy. It forces policymakers to understand what investors understand: Credibility takes a long time to gain, and won't come back easily once lost.
Keeping Clients in Check
For practitioners, there's no reason to make a bigger deal out of the new normal — it’s all about perception. When clients hear “fiscal crisis” or “debt spiral,” they see doom. In reality, the shift is slower and more mechanical; yields are simply adjusting to the new risk/reward mentality we now have as a nation.
This should not frustrate clients who are otherwise still receiving bond payments. They're simply receiving bond payments that are slightly higher to account for our national tab. In the end, it's fiscal responsibility — more than inflation — that will determine where yields land.
At the portfolio level, this is what makes bonds what they're supposed to be once again: consistent income and diversification. Advisors need not view elevated yields as a system gone awry; instead, they should view it as a repricing of discipline from top to bottom. This isn't the end of the world. It's the market doing its job.
The Final Word
America may not be losing its standing, but the bond market is speaking a new language — one that gives value to time and money, but more importantly, trust.
That's the fiscal premium: a small yet expanding manifestation of how the investor class feels about Washington's strictness (or lack thereof). It's not a measure credibility rather than impending economic doom.
This distinction is important for advisors. It substantiates what markets inherently suggest and moves the focus away from what Powell intends to do next, toward what Washington will do next in its budgeting process. Our clients need perspective, not speculationperspective.
Because the only thing concrete about bonds these days is this: When trust comes into question, the numbers do the talking.
Charles Urquhart is the founder of Fixed Income Resources.
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