Iran's suspension of communication with the US and crude oil above $94 a barrel are building a floor under longer-term Treasury yields, according to Charles Schwab.
Iran's suspension of communication with the US and crude oil above $94 a barrel are building a floor under longer-term Treasury yields, according to Charles Schwab.

Iran's suspension of communication with the United States and crude oil above $94 a barrel are building a floor under longer-term Treasury yields, with the breakdown in diplomatic channels removing the prospect of near-term de-escalation in the Middle East conflict.
Rising crude oil prices from sustained US-Iran hostilities are establishing a floor for longer-term Treasury yields, with Brent crude holding above $94 a barrel as diplomatic channels collapse and the risk premium embedded in energy markets shows no sign of dissipating.
"Crude oil has become the single most important indicator for where longer-term yields are headed," said Cooper Howard, fixed income strategist at Charles Schwab. "As long as tensions persist, energy costs will keep inflation expectations elevated, preventing yields from falling back to pre-conflict levels."
Brent crude traded at $94 a barrel Monday, down more than 18% from its post-invasion peak but still up 43% over the past 12 months. Iran's Tasnim news agency reported Sunday that Tehran's negotiating team had stopped exchanging messages with the US through mediators, following weekend US strikes on Iranian military targets and Iran's subsequent attack on a US air base. The 10-year Treasury yield rose 6 basis points to 4.38% as traders priced in a 56% probability of at least one Federal Reserve rate hike by year-end, according to CME Group's FedWatch tool.
The Strait of Hormuz, through which about 21% of global oil trade passes, remains the central flashpoint. Iran has effectively restricted access since late February, when US-Israeli strikes triggered a cycle of retaliation that has reshaped global energy supply chains. The last time a major shipping chokepoint was disrupted at this scale — during the 2019 Abqaiq-Khurais attacks on Saudi Aramco facilities — oil prices spiked 15% in a single day but normalized within weeks as spare capacity was deployed. This time, the disruption has persisted for more than three months with no diplomatic resolution in sight, suggesting the current risk premium may be structural rather than cyclical.
The impact is cascading through global fixed income markets. UK gilt yields rose Monday after Nationwide reported the first monthly decline in house prices this year, with the average property falling 0.6% in May as consumer confidence weakened. The Bank of England faces a difficult choice at its June 18 meeting: hold rates at 3.75% and risk inflation reaccelerating, or raise them and deepen the housing slowdown. Money markets currently assign a 40% probability of a 25-basis-point hike, according to OIS pricing.
Gold, traditionally a hedge against geopolitical risk, fell nearly 2% to $4,451.65 an ounce Monday as the dollar strengthened, with the DXY index rising 0.3%. Higher-for-longer rate expectations are weighing on the non-yielding metal even as safe-haven demand persists. "Expectations for interest rates to remain higher for longer are likely to keep gold under pressure, unless bond yields stop rising and rates begin to stabilise or trend lower," said Jim Wyckoff, market analyst at American Gold Exchange.
For fixed income investors, the key question is whether the crude oil risk premium will persist. If Iran's cessation of diplomatic communication hardens into a prolonged standoff, the floor under yields could rise further. Charles Schwab's Howard noted that the intersection of energy supply risk and sticky inflation leaves little room for the Fed to ease even if growth slows — a scenario that would keep the 10-year yield anchored above 4% through year-end.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.