Global markets are facing a sharp rise in bond yields, yet equities continue to show strength. The United States 30‑year Treasury yield has touched 5.2% while India’s 10‑year government bond yield stands at 7.13%. Commodity prices remain firm with Brent crude above 107 to 114 dollars and gold close to record highs. Despite these pressures, the S&P 500 is near its peak and the Nifty is holding steady.
Analysts explain this resilience through a K‑shaped economy. On one side, technology and artificial intelligence are driving productivity gains and lowering costs in services. On the other side, physical goods such as oil and metals are experiencing inflationary shocks. This split allows strong companies to absorb higher borrowing costs while weaker firms struggle. Lessons from 1994 show that productivity growth can offset rate hikes and support margins.
In India, tier‑one IT firms benefit from AI adoption, capital goods and infrastructure players gain from strong balance sheets, and exporters with backward integration enjoy currency advantages. Upstream oil and gas companies also provide dividend support. However, mid‑tier firms with heavy debt and limited pricing power face challenges.
Experts advise focusing on large companies with scale and technology advantages, avoiding debt‑heavy firms, and maintaining discipline in valuations. Dividend‑backed commodity plays can act as a hedge. Risks remain in sticky inflation, windfall taxes, and execution delays, but the broader bull market shows no signs of collapse.

