Duration & Credit Pulse: May 25, 2025

Duration & Credit Pulse – Week Ending May 25, 2025 | Mariemont Capital

Duration & Credit Pulse

Week Ending May 25, 2025

Executive Summary

Bottom Line: Moody's historic downgrade of US sovereign debt to Aa1 dominated fixed income markets during the week of May 19-25, completing the trilogy of rating cuts and forcing a fundamental reassessment of Treasury risk premiums. The 10-year yield rose modestly to 4.51% while the 30-year breached 5.0% as markets exhibited classic bear steepening, even as front-end yields showed surprising resilience. A record-setting TIPS auction achieved a 2.220% real yield—the second-highest in 16 years—while VIX surged over 5 points to 22.29, signaling volatility regime change ahead.

Duration Dashboard

MaturityMay 18, 2025May 25, 2025Weekly Δ5-Year Percentile
2‑Year 4.00% 3.99% -1 bp 36th %ile (middle range)
5‑Year 4.09% 4.08% -1 bp 59th %ile (middle range)
10‑Year 4.48% 4.51% +3 bp 90th %ile (extreme)
30‑Year 4.95% 5.04% +9 bp 99th %ile (extreme)

Post-Downgrade Bear Steepening Accelerates

4.3% 4.4% 4.5% 4.6% 4.7% 2Y 5Y 10Y 30Y Sovereign Downgrade Drives Uniform Selloff 3.99% 4.08% 4.51% 5.04% May 18, 2025 May 25, 2025

Curve Analysis: The Treasury curve exhibited classic bear steepening behavior as Moody's downgrade catalyzed a fundamental repricing of US sovereign risk. The 2s30s spread widened to 105 basis points from 95bp the prior week, with long-end yields bearing the brunt of fiscal sustainability concerns. The 30-year bond's move above 5% to 5.04% marked a critical psychological breach, reaching the 99th percentile of its 5-year range. In contrast, the front end showed resilience with 2-year yields actually declining 1bp, reflecting maintained confidence in near-term Fed policy while long-term fiscal concerns drove the steepening dynamic.

Monday's opening brought immediate selling pressure following Moody's Friday evening downgrade, with the 10-year yield briefly touching 4.55% before stabilizing around 4.51%. The 30-year bond bore the brunt of the selloff, decisively breaking through 5% to close at 5.04% as pension funds and insurers reassessed duration risk in a world without US triple-A certainty. Notably, the front end diverged from typical selloff patterns, with 2-year yields actually declining marginally, suggesting the market views fiscal concerns as primarily a long-term phenomenon rather than an immediate monetary policy driver.

TIPS Auction Reveals Inflation Protection Premium: Thursday's $18 billion 10-year TIPS reopening achieved a remarkable 2.220% real yield—the second-highest since 2009—crystallizing market dynamics in the post-downgrade environment. With breakeven inflation at 2.34%, investors demonstrated strong appetite for inflation protection even at historically elevated real rates. The auction's 2.35 bid-to-cover ratio, while respectable, fell short of recent averages, suggesting price discovery remains challenging as markets recalibrate inflation and fiscal risk premiums simultaneously.
Fiscal Dominance Alert—The New Fixed Income Paradigm: Moody's downgrade crystallizes a fundamental regime change: fiscal policy now dominates monetary policy in driving Treasury yields and term premiums. With federal debt approaching $36 trillion and annual interest costs exceeding $950 billion—larger than the entire defense budget—the US has crossed into uncharted territory where debt dynamics become self-reinforcing. All three rating agencies now flag US fiscal sustainability, removing the psychological anchor of unanimous AAA ratings that supported Treasury valuations for decades. This isn't merely a technical adjustment but a structural shift requiring investors to price genuine credit risk into US sovereign debt. The Fed's diminished ability to control long-end yields through monetary policy alone means traditional duration hedging strategies require fundamental reconsideration.

Credit Pulse

MetricMay 18, 2025May 25, 2025Weekly Δ5-Year Percentile
IG OAS 82 bp 86 bp +4 bp 22nd %ile (tight)
HY OAS 298 bp 318 bp +20 bp 17th %ile (very tight)
VIX Index 17.24 22.29 +5.05 72nd %ile (elevated)

Corporate credit markets demonstrated surprising vulnerability following the sovereign downgrade, with high yield spreads widening 20 basis points to 318bp—the largest weekly move of 2025. Despite remaining at the 17th percentile historically, the magnitude of widening signaled a regime shift in risk appetite. Investment grade proved more resilient with just 4bp of widening to 86bp, maintaining its position near historic tights. The real story emerged in volatility markets where VIX surged over 5 points to 22.29, reaching the 72nd percentile and confirming underlying market anxiety that credit spreads had yet to fully reflect.

Bank Downgrades Signal Systemic Repricing Ahead: Moody's Monday downgrade of JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, and Wells Fargo to Aa2 represents more than technical ratings alignment—it fundamentally alters the calculus of implicit government support. While immediate investment grade widening remained contained at 4bp, the 20bp surge in high yield spreads and VIX spike to 22.29 (72nd percentile) suggest broader contagion concerns. With financials comprising 25% of investment grade indices, this recalibration of systemic support expectations could catalyze the normalization from extreme spread tights that has been overdue for quarters.

US Macroeconomic Assessment – Fiscal Dominance Takes Center Stage

The week of May 19-25, 2025 marked a pivotal transition as Moody's downgrade forced markets to confront the reality of US fiscal deterioration that had been building for years. With federal debt approaching $36 trillion and interest costs projected to exceed $950 billion in fiscal 2025, the agency's action validated concerns that political gridlock had rendered meaningful fiscal reform impossible. The downgrade's timing—amid slowing growth and persistent inflation—created a particularly challenging backdrop for policymakers.

Economic momentum fades as policy constraints tighten: While comprehensive economic data for the exact week remained limited, surrounding indicators painted a picture of an economy losing steam. Manufacturing PMI had slipped to 48.5 in contraction territory, while services barely clung to expansion at 49.9. Consumer sentiment languished near historic lows despite Conference Board confidence showing inexplicable strength. This divergence highlighted the complexity facing the Federal Reserve: growth clearly decelerating yet inflation remaining stubbornly above target at 2.4% annually.

TIPS market reveals inflation expectations entrenchment: The week's marquee economic event—Thursday's TIPS auction—provided crucial insight into inflation psychology. The 2.220% real yield represented genuine value for the first time in years, yet the implied breakeven inflation rate of 2.34% suggested markets see little prospect of returning to the Fed's 2% target sustainably. This pricing reflects recognition that fiscal dominance, supply chain restructuring, and deglobalization have created a structurally higher inflation floor that monetary policy alone cannot address.

Housing market stress intensifies: Mortgage rates' spike above 7% following the downgrade delivered another blow to the already-struggling housing sector. With affordability at multi-decade lows and builders pulling back dramatically—starts down 9.8% and sales plunging 13.7%—the housing market's traditional role as economic locomotive appeared increasingly impaired. The feedback loop between higher Treasury yields, mortgage rates, and housing activity threatened to accelerate the economic slowdown already underway.

Federal Reserve Policy Outlook

The Federal Reserve entered the post-downgrade era facing its most complex policy challenge since the Volcker years. With the June 18 FOMC meeting looming, markets maintained 60-75% odds of eventual rate cuts in 2025, though the sovereign downgrade and persistent inflation complicated the calculus. The central bank's challenge: balancing growth concerns against inflation that refuses to return sustainably to target while fiscal policy actively works at cross-purposes to monetary restraint.

Behind the scenes, Fed officials surely grappled with the implications of Moody's action for monetary policy transmission. Higher structural term premiums—driven by fiscal rather than monetary factors—risked tightening financial conditions beyond the Fed's intention. Yet aggressive easing to offset fiscal-driven yield increases would risk re-igniting inflation expectations. The upcoming Summary of Economic Projections would need to thread this needle carefully, likely showing a shallower and later cutting cycle than markets hoped while maintaining sufficient flexibility to respond to growth deterioration.

Week Ahead: Data Desert Amid Structural Shifts

  • Memorial Day Holiday (May 26): US markets closed Monday, potentially amplifying Tuesday's volatility as traders return to digest weekend developments and position ahead of month-end.
  • Consumer Confidence (May 27): Conference Board expected to show continued divergence from University of Michigan sentiment. Focus on inflation expectations and labor market assessments.
  • GDP Revision (May 29): Q1 second estimate likely to confirm sluggish 1.3% growth, though composition between consumption and investment matters for Fed outlook.
  • Core PCE Deflator (May 30): April inflation data represents week's marquee release. Any upside surprise would cement "higher for longer" narrative post-downgrade.
  • Month-End Flows: Index rebalancing and duration extension needs could amplify Treasury volatility in thin holiday-shortened conditions.

US Economic Positioning and Global Context

America's loss of unanimous triple-A status represents more than a technical ratings adjustment—it symbolizes the end of US fiscal exceptionalism that underpinned post-war financial architecture. The timing proved particularly problematic: just as deglobalization and supply chain reshoring demanded massive investment, fiscal capacity appeared increasingly constrained. This collision between strategic necessities and fiscal realities would define the investment landscape for years ahead.

Global implications ripple outward: International ramifications extended far beyond immediate market moves. Dollar hegemony, already under pressure from BRICS expansion and bilateral trade agreements, faced new questions as the pristine credit rating that partially justified reserve currency status disappeared. European and Asian policymakers, while publicly expressing confidence, privately accelerated contingency planning for a world where US fiscal credibility could no longer be assumed. For fixed income investors, Moody's action crystallized a new reality: genuine credit analysis must replace reflexive trust in sovereign guarantees, term premiums must expand to reflect fiscal risks, and correlations that defined portfolio construction for decades require fundamental reexamination. The week ending May 25, 2025 didn't create these challenges—but it made ignoring them impossible.

Key Articles of the Week

  • Moody's downgrades JPM, BofA and Wells Fargo after US credit rating cut
    Reuters
    May 19, 2025
    Read Article
  • Corporate bond market has muted response to Moody's US rating downgrade
    Reuters
    May 19, 2025
    Read Article
  • Investors shrug off Moody's downgrade as stocks, U.S. borrowing costs stay largely flat
    NBC News
    May 19, 2025
    Read Article
  • 10-year TIPS reopening auction gets real yield of 2.220%, 2nd highest in 16 years
    TIPSWatch
    May 22, 2025
    Read Article
Content Produced By:
Justin Taylor

Important Disclaimer

This report is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, a recommendation to buy or sell any security, or a solicitation of any kind. The information contained herein is believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed as to its accuracy or completeness. Past performance is not indicative of future results.

The analysis and opinions expressed in this report are those of Mariemont Capital and are subject to change without notice. Market conditions, economic factors, and investment strategies evolve continuously, and the views expressed herein may not reflect current conditions or opinions at a later date.

No representation or warranty, express or implied, is made as to the fairness, accuracy, completeness, or correctness of the information and opinions contained herein. Mariemont Capital and its affiliates, officers, directors, and employees may have positions in the securities mentioned in this report and may make purchases or sales while this report is in circulation.

Investing in fixed income securities involves risks, including interest rate risk, credit risk, inflation risk, reinvestment risk, and liquidity risk. The value of investments can go down as well as up, and investors may not get back the amount originally invested. This report should not be relied upon as the sole basis for investment decisions. Investors should conduct their own due diligence and consult with qualified financial, legal, and tax advisors before making any investment.

This report may not be reproduced, distributed, or published without the prior written consent of Mariemont Capital. By accessing this report, you acknowledge and agree to be bound by the terms of this disclaimer.

Research Sources:
Reuters (Multiple Articles: Moody's US downgrade, Bank downgrades, Corporate bond response, Apple bond offering); Bloomberg (US Jobs Report, CPI Report, Fed communications); CNBC (Treasury yields, Inflation data, Fed decisions); NBC News (Market reaction to downgrade); Fox Business (Credit rating analysis); NPR (Tariff ruling coverage); ABC News (Bond market analysis); UBS (Sovereign rating commentary); Breckinridge Capital Advisors (Market commentary); J.P. Morgan Asset Management (Market review, CPI analysis); State Street Global Advisors (Treasury market analysis); TIPSWatch (TIPS auction coverage and analysis); FXStreet (Employment forecasts); Advisor Perspectives (Consumer sentiment analysis); Institute for Supply Management via PRNewswire (Manufacturing and Services PMI); LSEG Lipper Alpha (Fund flow data); Tax Foundation (Trade policy analysis); U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (Employment and inflation data); U.S. Census Bureau (Housing data); European Central Bank (Monetary policy decisions); Federal Reserve (FOMC communications); Moody's Investors Service (Rating actions).

Data extracted from market databases and Federal Reserve communications. Treasury yield and credit spread data based on market observations.
© 2025 Mariemont Capital. All rights reserved.
Published: Sunday, May 25, 2025, 6:42 PM EST