Let's do some calculations based on the total profits of American industrial companies: with a scale of $3.4 trillion, it implies that the annual dividends of the US stock market are approximately $2.6 trillion. Converted into dividend yield, that's just over 4%. Here's the interesting part—the yield on 30-year US Treasuries must move in tandem with this dividend yield.
Many people naturally assume that when the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates, it can suppress long-term bond yields. But the reality is quite the opposite. After a rate cut, market liquidity becomes abundant, and the total supply of funds increases. The most direct consequence is that the total dividends of US stocks rise accordingly. With more dividends, the dividend yield naturally goes up. Long-term bond yields? They are forced to rise along with them. So, blindly cutting rates actually serves little purpose.
Here's a heavily overlooked underlying logic: the true determinant of long-term bond yields is the nominal GDP growth rate, in other words, primarily driven by the dividend yield. The benchmark interest rate? That's just a surface factor. Short-term bond yields are also governed by the influence of nominal growth.
If you're still using the "benchmark rate determines long-term bond yields" theory to guide decisions, you're probably falling into a cognitive trap. This idea simply doesn't hold up from a fundamental perspective.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
12 Likes
Reward
12
8
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
IfIWereOnChain
· 5h ago
Wow, lowering interest rates not only fails to bring down long-term bonds, but actually pushes up dividend yields? This logic is a bit crazy, it feels like the Federal Reserve has been self-denying all these years.
View OriginalReply0
tokenomics_truther
· 6h ago
Damn, this logic completely shattered my previous understanding... Lowering interest rates actually pushes up long-term bond yields? That's pretty harsh.
View OriginalReply0
BridgeJumper
· 6h ago
Whoa, the logic is reversed now. I had understood it incorrectly before.
View OriginalReply0
JustAnotherWallet
· 6h ago
Whoa, has the logic been reversed? The Fed lowering interest rates actually pushes up long-term bond yields? Isn't that backwards? I need to think carefully about this.
View OriginalReply0
WhaleWatcher
· 6h ago
Wow, this logic reversal is pretty crazy... I always thought that lowering interest rates could suppress bond yields, but it turns out to be the opposite?
View OriginalReply0
MerkleMaid
· 6h ago
Wow, lowering interest rates actually causes long-term bond yields to rise? That logic is really clever. I had it backwards before.
View OriginalReply0
NeverVoteOnDAO
· 6h ago
This logic indeed bypassed a lot of people... I need to think carefully about how to suppress long-term bond yields through interest rate cuts.
View OriginalReply0
InscriptionGriller
· 6h ago
Oh my, this logic is just brilliant. The Federal Reserve cuts interest rates, but instead pushes up long-term bond yields. It's truly a case of putting the cart before the horse. The retail investors are still foolishly waiting for rate cuts to rescue the market, unaware that when funds increase, dividend yields soar, and long-term bond yields dance along—this is the real beginning of a death spiral.
Let's do some calculations based on the total profits of American industrial companies: with a scale of $3.4 trillion, it implies that the annual dividends of the US stock market are approximately $2.6 trillion. Converted into dividend yield, that's just over 4%. Here's the interesting part—the yield on 30-year US Treasuries must move in tandem with this dividend yield.
Many people naturally assume that when the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates, it can suppress long-term bond yields. But the reality is quite the opposite. After a rate cut, market liquidity becomes abundant, and the total supply of funds increases. The most direct consequence is that the total dividends of US stocks rise accordingly. With more dividends, the dividend yield naturally goes up. Long-term bond yields? They are forced to rise along with them. So, blindly cutting rates actually serves little purpose.
Here's a heavily overlooked underlying logic: the true determinant of long-term bond yields is the nominal GDP growth rate, in other words, primarily driven by the dividend yield. The benchmark interest rate? That's just a surface factor. Short-term bond yields are also governed by the influence of nominal growth.
If you're still using the "benchmark rate determines long-term bond yields" theory to guide decisions, you're probably falling into a cognitive trap. This idea simply doesn't hold up from a fundamental perspective.