Highlights

Quote

This week Japan’s bond market suffered a major selloff, with yields hitting an all-time high.

Quote

Ten-year yields spiked to 2.2%, while 30-year yields hit 3.66%.

Quote

This, warned Citadel CEO Ken Griffin, should be a cautionary tale to the U.S., where yields neared the danger benchmark of 5% this week.

Quote

“I think there’s an explicit warning that if your fiscal house is not in order, the bond vigilantes can come out and retract their price,” Griffin said at a Bloomberg event in Davos.

Quote

The 5% threshold is a concern for investors because it’s the point at which holding U.S. debt is comparable to the returns on stocks. This is a worry because bonds are seen as a stable, low-risk component of a balanced portfolio; if yields are at a level comparable to stocks, then risk may also be too high for investors who want stability.

Quote

“What’s particularly troubling is … when bonds and stocks move together in price, then bonds are no longer a hedge for your equity portfolio, and they lose a substantial part of what makes them so special in constructing a portfolio,” Griffin said.

Quote

Yields spiked as speculation mounted over how Europe and its investors would respond: namely, whether they would continue to hold U.S. debt.

Quote

National debt now exceeds 270 billion in debt interest payments alone in the final three months of fiscal year 2025.

Quote

“If U.S. Treasuries are viewed as being at risk because the United States is not seen as creditworthy, then bonds and stocks will move together in price. That will result in bonds having a much higher demand yield in the marketplace, so mortgage rates will be higher; the cost for us to finance our deficits will be higher,” Griffin said.

Quote

Yields fell fairly rapidly after President Trump delivered yet another TACO trade (Trump always chickens out) and unwound his tariff threat on European nations. Likewise, 30-year bonds are sitting between 4% and 5%, in keeping with the general trend of the past few years.

Quote

“The U.S. has so much wealth, we can maintain this level of deficit spending for some period of time. But the longer we wait to change direction, the more draconian the consequences will be of that change.”


Clean Copy

Economy

Ken Griffin says America was sent an ‘explicit warning’ from the bond market, and it’s time to get the national debt in order

By Eleanor Pringle

Senior Reporter, Economics and Markets

January 22, 2026, 6:38 AM ET

Ken Griffin, chief executive officer of Citadel Advisors LLC, at Bloomberg House during the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026.

Ken Griffin, CEO of Citadel, at the World Economic Forum meeting at Davos, Switzerland, Jan. 21, 2026. Chris Ratcliffe—Bloomberg/Getty Images

While it might appear that the most significant updates about the global economy are currently coming from a small town in the Swiss Alps, Tokyo may disagree. This week Japan’s bond market suffered a major selloff, with yields hitting an all-time high.

Ten-year yields spiked to 2.2%, while 30-year yields hit 3.66%. While the onset of the selloff can’t be pinpointed, it is likely a combination of geopolitical tensions and simmering concerns about Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s ¥21.3 trillion ($134 billion) economic plan to bolster Japan’s debt-heavy economy.

This, warned Citadel CEO Ken Griffin, should be a cautionary tale to the U.S., where yields neared the danger benchmark of 5% this week.

Recommended Video


“I think there’s an explicit warning that if your fiscal house is not in order, the bond vigilantes can come out and retract their price,” Griffin said at a Bloomberg event in Davos.

The 5% threshold is a concern for investors because it’s the point at which holding U.S. debt is comparable to the returns on stocks. This is a worry because bonds are seen as a stable, low-risk component of a balanced portfolio; if yields are at a level comparable to stocks, then risk may also be too high for investors who want stability.

“What’s particularly troubling is … when bonds and stocks move together in price, then bonds are no longer a hedge for your equity portfolio, and they lose a substantial part of what makes them so special in constructing a portfolio,” Griffin said.

U.S. Treasuries had a shaky week after President Trump announced over the weekend that a bevy of European nations would face additional tariffs if they did not support his bid to purchase Greenland. Yields spiked as speculation mounted over how Europe and its investors would respond: namely, whether they would continue to hold U.S. debt.

The speculation bothered Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who claimed that Deutsche Bank’s CEO called him personally to apologize for a note published by his institution over the weekend, which suggested European investors may vote with their feet in response to Trump’s threats. Deutsche’s note was one of many that suggested Treasuries could be used to right-size Trump’s plan, including UBS’s Paul Donovan, who suggested Uncle Sam’s deficits were the nation’s “Achilles’ heel.”

A U.S. funding issue

While recent yield shifts have resulted from short-term foreign policy, this does lay bare the broader question about U.S. funding. National debt now exceeds 270 billion in debt interest payments alone in the final three months of fiscal year 2025. Everyone from JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon to Fed Chair Jerome Powell are concerned not necessarily about the value of the nation’s debt, but its borrowing in relation to its economic growth.

While some might argue a debt crisis will never come to pass because the Federal Reserve can simply print more money (inflationary in its own right), others fear investors at some point will feel the U.S. has reached an unstable spending threshold and demand higher returns as a result.

“If U.S. Treasuries are viewed as being at risk because the United States is not seen as creditworthy, then bonds and stocks will move together in price. That will result in bonds having a much higher demand yield in the marketplace, so mortgage rates will be higher; the cost for us to finance our deficits will be higher,” Griffin said.

So far, investors seem relatively sanguine about America’s fiscal trajectory. Yields fell fairly rapidly after President Trump delivered yet another TACO trade (Trump always chickens out) and unwound his tariff threat on European nations. Likewise, 30-year bonds are sitting between 4% and 5%, in keeping with the general trend of the past few years.

That confidence may not last forever, added Griffin. While the nation is not currently “playing with fire,” he warned: “The U.S. has so much wealth, we can maintain this level of deficit spending for some period of time. But the longer we wait to change direction, the more draconian the consequences will be of that change.”

Join us at the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit May 19–20, 2026, in Atlanta. The next era of workplace innovation is here—and the old playbook is being rewritten. At this exclusive, high-energy event, the world’s most innovative leaders will convene to explore how AI, humanity, and strategy converge to redefine, again, the future of work. Register now.

About the Author

By Senior Reporter, Economics and Markets

Eleanor Pringle is an award-winning senior reporter at Fortune covering news, the economy, and personal finance. Eleanor previously worked as a business correspondent and news editor in regional news in the U.K. She completed her journalism training with the Press Association after earning a degree from the University of East Anglia.

  • economy

    Ken Griffin has a warning for Trump and the GOP: ‘I would not underestimate how grating a 3% inflation rate could be’ on Americans

    By
  • economy

    America’s economy is on a ‘sugar high’ warns Ken Griffin, and investors retreating to gold is one sign of a comedown

    By
  • When the bond market sneezes, corporate America worries about a ‘debt-induced heart attack’

    By
  • politics

    Ken Griffin says CEOs lining up to beg Trump for tariff exemptions is ‘nauseating’—and that the White House showing ‘favor’ undermines the American story

    By
  • politics

    Citadel founder Ken Griffin says executives are more worried over tariffs than they were during the Great Financial Crisis

    By

Latest in Economy



dimon

Economy

Jamie Dimon warns that the $38 trillion national debt is ‘not sustainable’ and it’s one of two ‘tectonic plates’ that may crash in the near future

By January 23, 2026

27 minutes ago

Trump, sitting at his desk in the Oval Office, shakes Elon Musk's hand.

Politics

The great power gap: Billionaires are 4,000 times more likely to hold office than you are, and Oxfam warns it’s ruining democracy

By January 23, 2026

2 hours ago

icebreaker

Politics

The U.S. has 3 of the world’s 240 icebreakers, the crucial shipping technology that would unlock Greenland

By and January 23, 2026

5 hours ago

kass

Future of Work

The real cost of job automation isn’t economic, it’s identity

By January 23, 2026

6 hours ago

U.S. President Donald Trump

Economy

Greenland deal doesn’t solve ‘mutual alienation’ between America and its allies, economists warn, and it puts the dollar under threat

By January 23, 2026

8 hours ago

Photo: DAVOS, SWITZERLAND - JANUARY 21: U.S. President Donald Trump attends a bilateral meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum (WEF) Annual Meeting on January 21, 2026 in Davos, Switzerland. The annual meeting of political and business leaders comes amid rising tensions between the United States and Europe over a range of issues, including Trump's vow to acquire Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Economy

Wall Street celebrates the end of Trump’s Greenland tariff threats and expects the Supreme Court will kill even more of them

By January 23, 2026

8 hours ago


Most Popular



placeholder alt text

Economy

‘Some form of crisis is almost inevitable’: The $38 trillion national debt will soon be growing faster than the U.S. economy itself, watchdog warns

By January 22, 2026

1 day ago

placeholder alt text

Success

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says ‘a lot’ of six-figure jobs in plumbing and construction are about to be unlocked because someone needs to build all these new AI centers

By January 21, 2026

2 days ago

placeholder alt text

Energy

Elon Musk warns the U.S. could soon be producing more chips than we can turn on. And China doesn’t have the same issue

By January 22, 2026

1 day ago

placeholder alt text

Politics

Jamie Dimon tells Davos: ‘You didn’t do a particularly good job making the world a better place’

By January 21, 2026

2 days ago

placeholder alt text

Europe

Denmark offered to trade Greenland to the U.S. in 1910—and America thought it was crazy

By and January 22, 2026

1 day ago


Annotated Copy

Economy

Ken Griffin says America was sent an ‘explicit warning’ from the bond market, and it’s time to get the national debt in order

By Eleanor Pringle

Senior Reporter, Economics and Markets

January 22, 2026, 6:38 AM ET

Ken Griffin, chief executive officer of Citadel Advisors LLC, at Bloomberg House during the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, on Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026.

Ken Griffin, CEO of Citadel, at the World Economic Forum meeting at Davos, Switzerland, Jan. 21, 2026. Chris Ratcliffe—Bloomberg/Getty Images

While it might appear that the most significant updates about the global economy are currently coming from a small town in the Swiss Alps, Tokyo may disagree. This week Japan’s bond market suffered a major selloff, with yields hitting an all-time high.

Ten-year yields spiked to 2.2%, while 30-year yields hit 3.66%. While the onset of the selloff can’t be pinpointed, it is likely a combination of geopolitical tensions and simmering concerns about Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi’s ¥21.3 trillion ($134 billion) economic plan to bolster Japan’s debt-heavy economy.

This, warned Citadel CEO Ken Griffin, should be a cautionary tale to the U.S., where yields neared the danger benchmark of 5% this week.

Recommended Video


“I think there’s an explicit warning that if your fiscal house is not in order, the bond vigilantes can come out and retract their price,” Griffin said at a Bloomberg event in Davos.

The 5% threshold is a concern for investors because it’s the point at which holding U.S. debt is comparable to the returns on stocks. This is a worry because bonds are seen as a stable, low-risk component of a balanced portfolio; if yields are at a level comparable to stocks, then risk may also be too high for investors who want stability.

“What’s particularly troubling is … when bonds and stocks move together in price, then bonds are no longer a hedge for your equity portfolio, and they lose a substantial part of what makes them so special in constructing a portfolio,” Griffin said.

U.S. Treasuries had a shaky week after President Trump announced over the weekend that a bevy of European nations would face additional tariffs if they did not support his bid to purchase Greenland. Yields spiked as speculation mounted over how Europe and its investors would respond: namely, whether they would continue to hold U.S. debt.

The speculation bothered Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who claimed that Deutsche Bank’s CEO called him personally to apologize for a note published by his institution over the weekend, which suggested European investors may vote with their feet in response to Trump’s threats. Deutsche’s note was one of many that suggested Treasuries could be used to right-size Trump’s plan, including UBS’s Paul Donovan, who suggested Uncle Sam’s deficits were the nation’s “Achilles’ heel.”

A U.S. funding issue

While recent yield shifts have resulted from short-term foreign policy, this does lay bare the broader question about U.S. funding. ==National debt now exceeds 270 billion in debt interest payments alone in the final three months of fiscal year 2025.== Everyone from JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon to Fed Chair Jerome Powell are concerned not necessarily about the value of the nation’s debt, but its borrowing in relation to its economic growth.

While some might argue a debt crisis will never come to pass because the Federal Reserve can simply print more money (inflationary in its own right), others fear investors at some point will feel the U.S. has reached an unstable spending threshold and demand higher returns as a result.

“If U.S. Treasuries are viewed as being at risk because the United States is not seen as creditworthy, then bonds and stocks will move together in price. That will result in bonds having a much higher demand yield in the marketplace, so mortgage rates will be higher; the cost for us to finance our deficits will be higher,” Griffin said.

So far, investors seem relatively sanguine about America’s fiscal trajectory. Yields fell fairly rapidly after President Trump delivered yet another TACO trade (Trump always chickens out) and unwound his tariff threat on European nations. Likewise, 30-year bonds are sitting between 4% and 5%, in keeping with the general trend of the past few years.

That confidence may not last forever, added Griffin. While the nation is not currently “playing with fire,” he warned: “The U.S. has so much wealth, we can maintain this level of deficit spending for some period of time. But the longer we wait to change direction, the more draconian the consequences will be of that change.”

Join us at the Fortune Workplace Innovation Summit May 19–20, 2026, in Atlanta. The next era of workplace innovation is here—and the old playbook is being rewritten. At this exclusive, high-energy event, the world’s most innovative leaders will convene to explore how AI, humanity, and strategy converge to redefine, again, the future of work. Register now.

About the Author

By Senior Reporter, Economics and Markets

Eleanor Pringle is an award-winning senior reporter at Fortune covering news, the economy, and personal finance. Eleanor previously worked as a business correspondent and news editor in regional news in the U.K. She completed her journalism training with the Press Association after earning a degree from the University of East Anglia.

  • economy

    Ken Griffin has a warning for Trump and the GOP: ‘I would not underestimate how grating a 3% inflation rate could be’ on Americans

    By
  • economy

    America’s economy is on a ‘sugar high’ warns Ken Griffin, and investors retreating to gold is one sign of a comedown

    By
  • When the bond market sneezes, corporate America worries about a ‘debt-induced heart attack’

    By
  • politics

    Ken Griffin says CEOs lining up to beg Trump for tariff exemptions is ‘nauseating’—and that the White House showing ‘favor’ undermines the American story

    By
  • politics

    Citadel founder Ken Griffin says executives are more worried over tariffs than they were during the Great Financial Crisis

    By

Latest in Economy



dimon

Economy

Jamie Dimon warns that the $38 trillion national debt is ‘not sustainable’ and it’s one of two ‘tectonic plates’ that may crash in the near future

By January 23, 2026

27 minutes ago

Trump, sitting at his desk in the Oval Office, shakes Elon Musk's hand.

Politics

The great power gap: Billionaires are 4,000 times more likely to hold office than you are, and Oxfam warns it’s ruining democracy

By January 23, 2026

2 hours ago

icebreaker

Politics

The U.S. has 3 of the world’s 240 icebreakers, the crucial shipping technology that would unlock Greenland

By and January 23, 2026

5 hours ago

kass

Future of Work

The real cost of job automation isn’t economic, it’s identity

By January 23, 2026

6 hours ago

U.S. President Donald Trump

Economy

Greenland deal doesn’t solve ‘mutual alienation’ between America and its allies, economists warn, and it puts the dollar under threat

By January 23, 2026

8 hours ago

Photo: DAVOS, SWITZERLAND - JANUARY 21: U.S. President Donald Trump attends a bilateral meeting with NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum (WEF) Annual Meeting on January 21, 2026 in Davos, Switzerland. The annual meeting of political and business leaders comes amid rising tensions between the United States and Europe over a range of issues, including Trump's vow to acquire Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory. (Photo by Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Economy

Wall Street celebrates the end of Trump’s Greenland tariff threats and expects the Supreme Court will kill even more of them

By January 23, 2026

8 hours ago


Most Popular



placeholder alt text

Economy

‘Some form of crisis is almost inevitable’: The $38 trillion national debt will soon be growing faster than the U.S. economy itself, watchdog warns

By January 22, 2026

1 day ago

placeholder alt text

Success

Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang says ‘a lot’ of six-figure jobs in plumbing and construction are about to be unlocked because someone needs to build all these new AI centers

By January 21, 2026

2 days ago

placeholder alt text

Energy

Elon Musk warns the U.S. could soon be producing more chips than we can turn on. And China doesn’t have the same issue

By January 22, 2026

1 day ago

placeholder alt text

Politics

Jamie Dimon tells Davos: ‘You didn’t do a particularly good job making the world a better place’

By January 21, 2026

2 days ago

placeholder alt text

Europe

Denmark offered to trade Greenland to the U.S. in 1910—and America thought it was crazy

By and January 22, 2026

1 day ago