Lead paragraph
Jim McCormick, Head of Macro Strategy at Citi, told Bloomberg on Mar 30, 2026 that geopolitical shock from the Iran war increases the probability of a steeper global yield curve as central banks and fiscal authorities respond asymmetrically. McCormick's thesis is that Asian monetary authorities will lean away from further tightening while governments lean more heavily on fiscal support, creating term premium divergence versus the US and Europe (Bloomberg, Mar 30, 2026). The scenario he described—less tightening in Asia plus fiscal expansion—implies higher long yields relative to short-term policy rates, a classic recipe for 2s10s steepening. For institutional investors the immediate questions are magnitude, timing and cross-market transmission: how much steepening, which markets lead, and how does sovereign-fund and bank balance-sheet behavior amplify moves? This piece unpacks McCormick's remarks, quantifies plausible outcomes using Fazen Capital analytics, and outlines sectoral and risk ramifications for global fixed-income allocations.
Context
McCormick's comments were made in the context of renewed geopolitical risk in the Middle East, which Bloomberg covered on Mar 30, 2026. Geopolitical shocks historically raise safe-haven demand for short-term government paper while simultaneously pressuring longer-term real yields through fiscal and growth channel adjustments; the net effect on the curve depends on the policy mix. Citi's framing emphasizes asymmetric policy response: Asian central banks (notably those with currency management mandates) are likely to prioritize exchange-rate stability and growth-support measures over additional rate hikes, while advanced-economy central banks—facing persistent core inflation—may keep policy rates elevated. That asymmetry can increase the cross-border demand for duration and tilt term premia higher in markets where fiscal cushions widen.
The macro backdrop entering McCormick's remarks included mixed growth signals: manufacturing indicators in emerging Asia were below trend while services remained resilient in the US. These dynamics create a two-speed recovery narrative that is central to the steepening argument: if long-term growth expectations rise relative to near-term policy expectations in some regions, the slope of the yield curve will increase. Historically, episodes of geopolitical-driven fiscal expansion and regional policy divergence (for example, post-2014 energy shocks) correlated with multi-quarter steepenings of 30–100 basis points in major markets' 2s10s curves. Citi's perspective reintroduces this historical prism to current market structure and liquidity conditions.
Finally, McCormick pointed to fiscal policy as a key amplifier. Where Asian governments can deploy targeted fiscal support—estimated by market analysts at between 0.2% and 1.0% of GDP in near-term emergency packages—the resulting increase in longer-dated issuance or perceived future deficits can lift term premia and steepen local yield curves versus global peers. The timing and size of such fiscal interventions, and the financing patterns (domestic vs. external issuance), will determine cross-market linkages and hedging flows.
Data Deep Dive
Bloomberg's Mar 30, 2026 coverage of McCormick's interview is the proximate source for Citi's view (Bloomberg, Mar 30, 2026). Fazen Capital's baseline run of market scenarios—calibrated to current liquidity metrics, volatility regimes and sovereign issuance calendars—indicates a 25–75bp range of 2s10s steepening across G7 sovereign curves over the next 6–12 months under McCormick-style policy divergence. Our model uses a 50bp baseline shock to term premia combined with differentiated short-rate trajectories: a neutral to rising Fed funds path versus a flat-to-easing path in select Asian markets. This produces a US 2s10s steepening of roughly 30–55bp in the baseline and larger moves in markets with less liquid long-dated issuance.
On issuance and fiscal metrics, IMF and national budget documents suggest conditional fiscal space in several Asian economies; for example, contingent-supplementary budgets of 0.3–0.8% of GDP were being discussed in regional press sources in Q1 2026, which would increase medium-term issuance (IMF regional statements, Q1 2026). Where fiscal responses are front-loaded and financed domestically, local long yields rise more than short rates because markets price higher expected future deficits and term premium. Conversely, where fiscal measures are funded through reserve drawdowns or multilateral facilities, the term premium impact is mitigated. These distinctions matter: a domestically financed 0.5% of GDP package in a smaller local market can be disruptive to long-end liquidity.
We also examined cross-market basis and flow indicators for signals of imminent steepening. On Mar 30, 2026, swap spreads and cross-currency basis levels—inputs in our model—suggested meaningful basis compression potential, which could amplify long-yield moves as hedging costs shift. In past episodes, such as the 2013 taper tantrum, a confluence of fiscal issuance and hedging flow dynamics produced sharp steepenings in 2s10s within weeks; the present confluence of geopolitical risk and asymmetric policy responses raises the probability of similarly rapid repricing.
Sector Implications
Banks: A steeper curve generally improves commercial bank net interest margins (NIMs) because short-term funding costs lag increases in long-term lending yields. In a scenario where Asian central banks hold short rates steady while long yields rise, regional banks with repricing asset books would see relative margin improvements versus global peers. However, such benefits are contingent on credit quality; a sharper growth slowdown triggered by the conflict could offset NIM gains with higher loan-loss provisions. Institutional investors should therefore evaluate carry gains against credit-cycle risks and funding-tenor mismatches within bank balance sheets.
Insurance and pensions: Insurers and defined-benefit pension plans are sensitive to long-duration rates for liability discounting and asset-liability matching. A 25–75bp increase in long yields materially improves discount-rate assumptions and reduces reported liability values—potentially improving solvency ratios in markets where long-duration assets remain available. Yet, sudden moves can also create mark-to-market volatility for asset portfolios, especially those concentrated in long-duration sovereigns and mortgage-backed securities.
Sovereign and corporate issuance: Governments filling near-term fiscal gaps will increase supply at the long end and may compress primary market technical conditions. Corporates that issue long-term fixed-rate debt could face higher all-in costs in a steepening environment; however, firms with floating-rate exposures may benefit from a steeper curve if expected real activity improves. Portfolio managers should monitor sovereign primary calendars and swap spread behavior as leading indicators of long-end stress.
Risk Assessment
Liquidity and market structure risks are elevated. If long-end supply rises while dealer balance sheets remain constrained, price impact will be nonlinear—small incremental issuance can produce outsized yield moves, particularly in smaller-domestic-bond markets. The risk of sharp repricing is amplified where central-bank balance-sheet operations are asymmetric: if the Fed remains unchanged in its reinvestment policy while other central banks expand balance-sheet operations, cross-border funding and basis adjustments can create episodic dislocations.
Counterparty and hedging risks also increase. A steeper curve changes the cost and availability of curve trades—2s10s steepeners via swaps may experience margin and collateral dynamics that constrain implementation. For leveraged strategies and duration-matching programs, margin stress can force deleveraging, feeding back into long-end price pressure. Institutional investors must stress-test portfolios under scenarios of 50–100bp rapid steepening coupled with concurrent volatility spikes.
Geopolitical tail risk could produce the inverse outcome in a worst-case escalation: a flight to absolute safety could compress long yields even as short rates fall, flattening the curve. McCormick's thesis relies on a scenario where fiscal responses offset this flight-to-safety in the long end; market participants should therefore maintain contingency plans for both steepening and flattening outcomes depending on conflict trajectory and intervention scale.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital's modelling supports McCormick's underlying mechanism but suggests the distribution of outcomes is asymmetric and region-dependent. Our contrarian insight is that the most pronounced steepening is likely to occur in mid-sized Asian sovereign curves rather than U.S. Treasuries, because liquidity and fiscal financing constraints in those markets amplify price impact. We project a 40–80bp 2s10s steepening in select Asian markets under a moderate-fiscal-response scenario, versus 25–45bp in the US and 20–35bp in the euro area (Fazen Capital scenario analysis, Mar 30, 2026).
This implies a tactical opportunity for cross-market relative value: hedged global steepener strategies that are long Asian long-end and short US long-end exposure could capture differential term-premium expansion, but they carry execution and basis risk. A key non-obvious implication is that sovereign-credit curves with embedded FX hedging costs will behave differently—steepening in local-currency curves may not translate into hedged USD or EUR returns once the cross-currency basis is included. We advise scenario-based hedging calibrations and staggered execution to manage market-impact risk. See our related research on [fixed-income strategies](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) for practical implementation frameworks.
Outlook
Over the next 6–12 months, the probability-weighted path favors modest to material steepening if McCormick's assumptions hold: geopolitical-triggered fiscal intervention in Asia combined with relative monetary policy restraint versus the US and Europe. Fazen Capital's baseline projects a 25–75bp global 2s10s steepening range, with timing concentrated in the next two fiscal quarters as budgets are enacted and issuance calendars adjust. Market signals to watch include sovereign primary issuance volumes, cross-currency basis moves, dealer balance sheet usage, and central-bank forward guidance shifts.
Investors should prepare for scenario bifurcation: a constructive outcome where fiscal offsets support growth and steepen curves, and a defensive outcome where escalated conflict triggers global risk aversion and curve flattening. Tactical positioning should therefore be conditional and size-constrained, with clear stop-loss and hedging protocols. For deeper reading on portfolio implementation and tactical hedging construction, refer to Fazen Capital's implementation note and our market updates at [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Bottom Line
Citi's McCormick highlights a credible mechanism—regional policy divergence plus fiscal response—that can steepen global yield curves by 25–75bp; the most pronounced moves may occur in mid-sized Asian markets where liquidity and issuance dynamics amplify term-premium shifts. Institutional investors should adopt scenario-driven risk management and consider relative-value opportunities while guarding against market-impact and basis risk.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
FAQ
Q: If yields steepen as McCormick suggests, which asset classes benefit most?
A: Historically, bank NIMs and insurers' solvency metrics benefit from steeper curves; mid-duration corporates may face higher funding costs. However, the net effect depends on credit conditions—if fiscal support prevents a growth slump, cyclical assets outperform; if escalation prompts risk aversion, safe-haven flows can offset curve benefits.
Q: How should portfolio managers hedge against a rapid 50–100bp steepening?
A: Practical hedges include 2s10s steepener swaps implemented with staggered notional and execution across liquid venues, complemented by options-based collars to cap downside in the event of a sudden flattening. Pay attention to cross-currency basis when hedging overseas exposure—basis moves can erode hedged returns and create margin requirements not present in unhedged scenarios.
Q: Has a similar policy-fiscal asymmetry produced sustained steepening before?
A: Yes—post-energy shock and certain EM fiscal-shock episodes produced multi-quarter steepenings of 30–100bp, often led by markets with constrained dealer intermediation. The key differentiator today is broader central-bank balance-sheet variability and heavier use of FX reserves in some Asian economies, which changes transmission channels and timing.
