The starting point for 2026 Bonds is not “rate cuts” It is compensation for uncertainty
OPNEX’s read is that the bond market is rebuilding an old price component many traders ignored for years: term premium—extra yield investors demand to hold long-duration paper when fiscal, policy, and credibility risk feel less predictable. Reuters flagged this “risk premia” rebuild heading into 2026.
That framing matters because it explains why long-end yields can rise even when the market still debates easing later in the year.
What the curve is already signaling
A clean way to see the regime is to compare the belly to the front end:
- The 10-year Treasury yield was around 4.30% on January 20, 2026.
- The 2-year Treasury yield was around 3.60% on January 20, 2026.
That spread implies a meaningfully positive 10s–2s slope—i.e., a curve that can re-steepen even without a dramatic growth boom, simply because long-end buyers demand more compensation for duration. Reuters also described a sharp steepening move on January 20 as yields jumped.
OPNEX’s interpretation: the market is pricing less “near-term recession fear” and more “long-run uncertainty costs money.”
The inflation floor is lower but not gone
Bond rallies tend to be cleaner when inflation is collapsing. That is not the current setup.
The BLS reported CPI rose 2.7% from December 2024 to December 2025, and core CPI (less food & energy) rose 2.6% over the same period.
For OPNEX, this keeps a floor under “sticky-inflation” risk—and makes long-end yields more sensitive to any policy or tariff headline that could reheat price expectations.
Supply is a headline risk in 2026 because the numbers are large
OPNEX doesn’t treat Treasury issuance as background noise. The Treasury itself estimates $578 billion of privately-held net marketable borrowing for the January–March 2026 quarter (assuming an end-of-March cash balance of $850B).
In markets where marginal demand for duration is already cautious, supply expectations can act like gravity: investors don’t need to be bearish—they just need to demand a better entry yield.
The quiet tool that matters more than people think Treasury buybacks
OPNEX also watches buybacks because they touch liquidity and “off-the-run” pricing—areas that can amplify volatility when markets get jumpy.
Treasury describes two buyback types:
- Liquidity support buybacks to bolster market liquidity with predictable opportunities to sell off-the-run securities.
- Cash management buybacks to reduce cash-balance volatility and minimize bill supply disruptions.
OPNEX’s view: buybacks won’t “solve” yields, but they can influence how stress expresses—through liquidity and spread behavior rather than only through outright yield levels.
Why global duration stress is now part of the U.S. Bonds story
Two global signals OPNEX flags:
Japan: Reports highlighted sharp moves in JGBs tied to fiscal concerns, including the 10-year yield reaching 2.380% (a multi-decade high) amid market anxiety.
Separately, the FT reported Japan’s 40-year yield moving above 4% for the first time.
Europe: The FT reported European governments leaning more toward shorter-term borrowing as long-dated demand from pension funds retreats—raising the risk that long-end supply/demand dynamics stay uncomfortable.
OPNEX takeaway: when Japan and Europe reprice the long end, U.S. duration often loses its “automatic hedge” feel—correlations can become less friendly.
The next catalyst cluster is policy communication not just data
The Federal Reserve’s first scheduled 2026 meeting is January 27–28.
OPNEX watches this meeting less for a single decision and more for the market’s reaction function: whether the Fed language calms term-premium anxiety or leaves room for “higher for longer” narratives to persist.
OPNEX’s practical checklist for Bonds in 2026
Instead of predicting one yield target, OPNEX tracks five weekly tells:
- Curve shape: is steepening driven by the long end (term premium) or the front end (policy repricing)?
- Inflation drift: does CPI keep cooling, or does it stall near the high-2s?
- Supply expectations: do borrowing estimates/issuance chatter pressure auctions?
- Liquidity stress: do buybacks and off-the-run spreads signal calm or strain?
- Global long-end moves: are Japan/Europe exporting duration volatility?






