US benchmark indices were roiled last week by the selloff in the bond markets. The S&P 500, the Dow Jones, and the Nasdaq 100 indices all posted weekly declines, as 10-year US Treasury yields posted a one-year high and even breached the psychologically-important 1.60 mark before moderating on Friday.
At the time of writing, the futures contracts for all three US benchmark stock indices are jumping higher.
Still, given the surging yields so far in 2021, Fed officials will have ample opportunity to calm the markets down as they come out in full force with their respectively scheduled speeches this week:
Monday, 1 March:
- New York Fed President John Williams
- Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic
- Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester
- Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari
Tuesday, 2 March:
- Fed Governor Lael Brainard
- San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly
Wednesday, 3 March:
Free Reports:
Sign Up for Our Stock Market Newsletter – Get updated on News, Charts & Rankings of Public Companies when you join our Stocks Newsletter
Get our Weekly Commitment of Traders Reports - See where the biggest traders (Hedge Funds and Commercial Hedgers) are positioned in the futures markets on a weekly basis.
- Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker
- Chicago Fed President Charles Evans
Thursday, 4 March:
- Fed Chair Jerome Powell
Besides the scheduled speeches by Fed officials, global investors will have plenty of economic events to keep them occupied this week:
- Monday, 1 March: US ISM manufacturing; Markit manufacturing PMI for Germany, Eurozone, UK
- Tuesday, 2 March: RBA policy decision; Eurozone inflation; Germany unemployment
- Wednesday, 3 March: Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak presents UK budget; China’s Caixin services PMI; Fed Beige Book
- Thursday, 4 March: OPEC+ meeting; US weekly jobless claims; Eurozone retail sales and unemployment
- Friday, 5 March: US non-farm payrolls; China kicks off National People’s Congress
Key themes
It remains to be seen how market participants digest the cross-currents surrounding these key factors that are weighing on market sentiment:
- US fiscal stimulus hopes
Over the weekend, the US House of Representatives passed President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion fiscal stimulus plan. The proposal now goes to the Senate, with just 2 weeks left before the March 14th deadline for when existing unemployment benefits expires. The Biden administration aims to approve those $1400 checks to American households by then.
Expectations for more US fiscal stimulus had been a major pillar for stock market bulls, although a lot of that optimism has already been baked into prices.
It remains to be seen whether fiscal stimulus optimism is enough to push US stocks higher and overcome the threat of the Fed pulling back its support for global financial markets due to improving US economic conditions.
- Rising US yields
As investors sell off US Treasuries, yields have been sharply rising.
Ultimately, those yields could hit a height when treasuries become attractive again and investors could then rotate funds back into US Treasuries, at the expense of stocks.
Investors are now mulling where that level would be, and trying to pre-empt such a scenario, which has contributed to the increased market volatility of late.
- Fed speak
The last thing the US central bank needs is to have the ongoing US economic recovery upended by a financial crisis. Investors will be closely monitoring whether Fed officials can still tolerate these higher Treasury yields, or when they could step in to calm things down in the markets.
So far, the Fed speak has had little success dampening market expectations that policymakers will prematurely ease up on their bond-purchasing programme.
Once the Fed gets serious about keeping yields under control, they might eventually intervene with stronger rhetoric, or even via overt policy measures, which could then dampen the volatility in bonds.
- US economic data
Should more of this week’s US economic data releases exceed market expectations, that could boost investors’ expectations that the improving US economic conditions would force the Fed to taper its asset-purchasing programme sooner rather than later.
However, signs of more marked improvements in the US economy could also spur value stocks higher while dampening growth stocks, a divergence which is becoming more notable with the climb in energy and financial stocks while the tech sector languishes.
Disclaimer: The content in this article comprises personal opinions and should not be construed as containing personal and/or other investment advice and/or an offer of and/or solicitation for any transactions in financial instruments and/or a guarantee and/or prediction of future performance. ForexTime (FXTM), its affiliates, agents, directors, officers or employees do not guarantee the accuracy, validity, timeliness or completeness, of any information or data made available and assume no liability as to any loss arising from any investment based on the same.
Article by ForexTime
ForexTime Ltd (FXTM) is an award winning international online forex broker regulated by CySEC 185/12 www.forextime.com

- The Middle East conflict is already driving inflation higher across the world Apr 24, 2026
- Gold Falls Nearly 3.0% Over the Week Amid Geopolitical Pressure Apr 24, 2026
- The diplomatic deadlock between the US and Iran is undermining investors’ appetite for risk Apr 23, 2026
- EUR/USD Falls for Third Day as Geopolitics and Strong Dollar Dictate Terms Apr 23, 2026
- Negotiations between the US and Iran have failed. Oil prices are back above 90 dollars per barrel Apr 22, 2026
- USD/JPY Pulls Higher: Yen Doubts Bank of Japan Apr 22, 2026
- NZD and CAD strengthen amid rising inflationary pressure Apr 21, 2026
- Pound Declines Amid Geopolitics and Political Risks Apr 21, 2026
- EUR/USD Starts the Week Higher, but the Outlook Remains Unstable Apr 20, 2026
- The situation in the Strait of Hormuz remains uncertain Apr 20, 2026