#US30

*US 30-Year Yield Spikes to 5.188%, Highest in Recent Months*

_Long-Term Bond Yields Surge as Selloff Accelerates_

The US 30-year government bond yield has jumped to *5.188%*, up 0.064 percentage points or *1.25%* on the day, marking a sharp move higher in long-term rates.

What the Chart Shows

- *Breakout Higher*: After consolidating between 4.85% and 4.95% for several sessions, yields broke out with a series of strong green candles, pushing straight through 5.00% and 5.15% resistance.

- *Momentum*: The move looks aggressive, with minimal pullbacks. Each red candle is quickly followed by a larger green candle, showing buyers of yield and sellers of bonds are in control.

- *Current Level*: 5.188% as of 06:40 UTC, near the session high of 5.200%.

Why It Matters

A rise in 30-year yields means bond prices are falling and long-term borrowing costs are climbing. It puts pressure on mortgages, corporate debt, and government financing. The speed of this move also signals growing concerns around inflation expectations, fiscal deficit, or reduced demand for long-duration US debt.

The 5.00% level, which acted as resistance, is now flipping to support. The next level to watch is 5.20%, and a break above could open the door toward 5.30%-5.35%.

Bottom Line

Long-term US yields are breaking out fast. If this pace continues, it will weigh on equities, especially growth and real estate sectors, while making fixed income more attractive for yield-seeking investors.