“The most important price in the world is the yield on the 10-year Treasury.”
~ Attributed to Bill Gross
Written by Bryan Lutz, Editor at Dollarcollapse.com:
The bond market is repricing the West in real time. And the chart making the rounds this week tells you exactly where confidence is going…
10y government bond yields of US, Japan, UK, Germany, France, and China since the beginning of the Iran war.
China = aquamarine line
If the Iran war strategy was "choking out China's oil supplies", it's time to reconsider the strategy. pic.twitter.com/Zd94QwuOEy
— Luke Gromen (@LukeGromen) May 15, 2026
As of mid-May 2026, the UK 10-year sits at 5.175%. The US 10-year at 4.579%. France at 3.939%. Germany at 3.150%. Japan at 2.702%.
China at 1.753%. And falling.
The Repricing Nobody Can Stop
Here’s how Bloomberg framed Monday’s session:
US Long Bond Yield Hits Highest Since 2023 on Inflation Concern
“Treasuries sold off on Monday, pushing the yield on 30-year notes to the highest in almost three years as investor concern over accelerating inflation fueled a selloff in global debt. The 30-year yield increased as much as four basis points to 5.16% as oil prices extended their gains… That’s the highest level since October 2023.”
This has been a trend US Treasury bonds since the start of the Iran War. The 30-year yield broke 5% for the first time since 2007. UK gilts traded above 5%. Japanese 10-year yields touched levels last seen since 1996.
Here’s what’s actually happening: the bid for Western sovereign debt is thinning, and the price has to clear lower (yields higher) until someone shows up to buy.
And Then There’s China
China is the largest holder of US debt outside of the Federal Reserve itself. It used to be the biggest foreign holder, but not anymore…
Chinese holdings of US Treasuries have fallen to their lowest level since the global financial crisis. They aren’t financing Washington’s deficits the way they did a decade ago. They’re financing something else.
They’re financing real assets like mines, refineries, and rare-earth processing. For example, China spent more on their clean energy buildout last year than the rest of the world combined.
And while Beijing buys hard assets, they’re also buying gold like most other major central banks. This week, Goldman confirmed what central bank gold demand data has shown for three years: official-sector buying is structural now.
The countries that run the printing presses are the ones whose yields keep climbing, while the countries accumulating reserves outside the dollar system are the ones whose yields are calm.
Foreign central banks now hold more gold than US Treasuries, which is the first time since 1996.
What the Chart Is Actually Telling You
Central banks have enabled governments to grow for fifty years past the point where any honest creditor would have cut it off. The bond market is the last honest creditor, and it’s finally cutting them off.
The US carries $39 trillion in federal debt. Interest costs run a trillion a year. Six Fed cuts since mid-2024 have only moved the 10-year yield up. That tells you the market is refusing to take the price the Fed wants to set.
China isn’t winning a currency war. China is the country whose currency isn’t being printed to fund permanent welfare and permanent war.
The Western yields are telling us the same thing they announced for the Dutch guilder, the British pound, and every other reserve currency that came before: the holders of paper get marked down, the holders of real things do not.

