KEY POINTS
  • The bond market had a wild ride on Thursday, reacting to the Fed’s willingness to permit the economy and inflation to run hot as the job market recovers.
  • Strategists say that the market had initially responded to the Fed's dovishness and forecast for no rate hikes through 2023.
  • By Thursday morning, rising inflation was the top concern. The bond market reacted dramatically to the Fed's policy to allow it to run above its 2% target.
Chairman of the Federal Reserve Jerome Powell testifies during the Senate's Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs hearing examining the quarterly CARES Act report to Congress on September 24, 2020, in Washington, DC.

Treasury yields flared on Thursday as bond market players grappled with the Federal Reserve's willingness to allow inflation to heat up.

The 10-year Treasury yield shot up from 1.64% late Wednesday to 1.75% Thursday, a 14-month high. It was at 1.706% in afternoon trading.