Quick Take: Markets repriced inflation expectations and pushed the long end higher. The Fed did nothing. Long-end Treasuries rose 9 to 11 bps; Prime, SOFR, and Fed funds did not move.
What Changed This Week
- FOMC held the federal funds target range at 3.50% to 3.75% on April 29.
- 2Y Treasury rose from 3.78% to 3.88% (+10 bps); 10Y Treasury rose from 4.30% to 4.40% (+10 bps).
- 5-year breakeven inflation rose from 2.60% to 2.69% (+9 bps); 5Y5Y forward rose from 2.16% to 2.27% (+11 bps).
- Prime stayed at 6.75%; SOFR drifted 1 bp to 3.64%; effective Fed funds unchanged at 3.64%.
- BBB option-adjusted spread held at 1.01% (+1 bp); high-yield OAS tightened from 2.85% to 2.77% (-8 bps).
- Fixed-quote loan pricing drifted up roughly 10 bps tracking the long end; variable products tied to Prime did not move.
The Federal Open Market Committee held the federal funds target range unchanged at its April 28-29 meeting, the outcome markets had priced in. What was not priced in was the curve reaction. Long-end Treasuries jumped 9 to 11 bps in the days surrounding the statement, and inflation breakevens moved with them. The Fed did not tighten. Markets tightened the long end on its behalf.
Market Signal: FOMC held rates. Markets repriced inflation. The long end moved without the Fed moving.
Snapshot (data as of May 1, 2026)
- Prime Rate: 6.75% (unchanged)
- SOFR: 3.64% (+1 bp WoW)
- Fed Funds Target: 3.50% to 3.75% (held April 29)
- Cycle Position: On hold; no SEP this meeting
- Next Catalyst: April CPI release on May 13; FOMC June 16-17 (projection meeting)
What the FOMC Said and What Changed
The April statement, released at 2:00 PM ET on April 29, kept the target range at 3.50% to 3.75% and offered no Summary of Economic Projections. There is no updated dot plot from this meeting. The committee characterized policy as appropriately positioned to bring inflation to 2% over time, language that markets read as patient but not preparing to ease.
The reaction was concentrated where the Fed has the least direct control. The 2-year, 5-year, 10-year, and 30-year Treasuries all rose roughly 10 bps. TIPS-implied breakevens rose in lockstep. The mechanical reading: investors marked up the inflation path they expect over the next 5 to 10 years and demanded more compensation to hold nominal Treasuries. The hold read as hawkish without action.
Key Takeaways
- A held FOMC produced a 10 bp parallel shift up in the Treasury curve, evidence that markets, not the Fed, are now setting the long-end repricing pace.
- Breakeven inflation moved meaningfully higher for the first time in our weekly coverage, ending several weeks of anchored readings.
- The 5Y5Y forward rate at 2.27% remains within a typical range but the 11 bp weekly jump is the largest single-week move we have logged this year.
- Credit spreads disagree with the inflation read: BBB held flat and high-yield tightened 8 bps, signaling that risk appetite is intact even as duration risk repriced.
- Borrowers on Prime-indexed paper saw zero change; borrowers shopping new fixed-rate quotes saw roughly 10 bps of drift, equivalent to about $30 per month per $500,000 on a 7-year term loan.
Current Rates and Week-over-Week Moves
| Benchmark | Apr 21, 2026 | May 1, 2026 | WoW Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Prime Rate | 6.75% | 6.75% | Unchanged |
| SOFR | 3.63% | 3.64% | +1 bp |
| Fed Funds (effective) | 3.64% | 3.64% | Unchanged |
| 2Y Treasury | 3.78% | 3.88% | +10 bps |
| 5Y Treasury | 3.91% | 4.02% | +11 bps |
| 10Y Treasury | 4.30% | 4.40% | +10 bps |
| 30Y Treasury | 4.89% | 4.98% | +9 bps |
| 10Y minus 2Y Spread | 0.52 | 0.51 | -1 bp |
| 5Y Breakeven | 2.60% | 2.69% | +9 bps |
| 10Y Breakeven | 2.38% | 2.48% | +10 bps |
| 5Y5Y Forward | 2.16% | 2.27% | +11 bps |
| BBB OAS | 1.00% | 1.01% | +1 bp |
| HY OAS | 2.85% | 2.77% | -8 bps |
The chart below isolates the week's basis-point moves across the indicators that matter for commercial borrowers. Long-end Treasuries and forward inflation expectations moved together; short-rate benchmarks held; credit spreads dispersed.
Curve and Term Commentary
The 10Y minus 2Y spread held essentially flat at 0.51 (from 0.52). The curve shifted up in parallel, not steepening or flattening, which points to inflation-risk repricing rather than a policy-path change.
Inflation Expectations: From Anchored to Drifting
Two weeks ago, in our analysis of the March CPI release, we argued that breakeven inflation had stayed anchored even through a hot consumer print and that this anchoring was the reason fixed-rate loan quotes had not moved. That thesis needs an update. This week, breakevens moved.
The 5-year breakeven added 9 bps; the 10-year added 10 bps; the 5Y5Y forward, which strips out near-term volatility and is the cleanest market read on long-run inflation expectations, added 11 bps to 2.27%. Forward expectations remain inside the historical range that has prevailed since the post-pandemic normalization, but the size of the weekly move is the largest we have logged. The earlier read that breakevens were anchored held for weeks. It does not hold this week. We will track whether the May CPI release reinforces or fades the move.
Credit Conditions: Spreads Disagree with the Inflation Read
This is a duration risk repricing, not a credit risk repricing. If markets were pricing genuine reflation risk, you would expect credit spreads to widen alongside breakevens. They did not. BBB option-adjusted spreads inched from 1.00% to 1.01%, effectively flat. High-yield spreads tightened 8 bps to 2.77%. Tight credit appetite alongside higher Treasury yields tells you investors are demanding more compensation for duration but not for default risk. For commercial borrowers, that combination keeps the all-in cost of fixed-rate paper drifting up while the lender appetite to extend credit holds. Bank lending data continues to show capacity available to borrowers who clear underwriting.
Today's SLOOS Reinforces the Demand-Cooling Thesis
The Federal Reserve's first-quarter Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey, released today, shows that the broad easing trend in CRE lending standards stalled while loan demand softened across categories. That demand cooling matters for the rate picture: weaker demand for credit pushes against the inflation-premium narrative that drove this week's Treasury move. Inflation expectations are rising while real demand is softening. That tension defines the next month.
Estimated Loan Rate Ranges (Week of May 4, 2026)
| Product | Rate Range | WoW |
|---|---|---|
| SBA 7(a) variable (Prime + 2.25% to Prime + 3.00%) | 9.00% to 9.75% | Unchanged |
| SBA 504 (20-year debenture) | 6.10% to 6.60% | +10 bps |
| Commercial term loan (5-7 year fixed) | 7.35% to 9.60% | +10 bps |
| Business line of credit (variable) | 7.75% to 11.25% | Unchanged |
| Equipment financing | 7.10% to 11.10% | +10 bps |
| Bridge or short-term | 10.00% to 14.00% | Unchanged |
What Borrowers Should Note
If your firm carries a Prime-indexed loan, this week was a non-event. Variable lines of credit and SBA 7(a) variable paper price off Prime, which did not move. Your monthly servicing cost is identical to last week.
If your firm is shopping new fixed-rate paper, this week mattered. Commercial term loans, SBA 504 debentures, and equipment financing price off the long end of the Treasury curve, and the long end moved up roughly 10 bps. On a $500,000 commercial term loan amortized over 7 years, 10 bps of incremental rate adds approximately $30 per month, or about $2,500 over the term. The decision to lock or float changes only at the margin: if you were planning to lock this month, the math still favors locking; if you were planning to wait for a Fed cut, that wait got modestly more expensive.
For firms managing rate exposure across a capital stack, the broader read is that interest rate strategy now has to account for breakeven volatility separately from policy-rate volatility. Last year, the two moved together. This week, they did not. The same holds when read against last week's snapshot, where every benchmark sat within a few basis points of the prior week.
What to Watch
- April CPI release, May 13. If the print confirms the breakeven move, expect another leg up at the long end and modest further drift in fixed-rate quotes. A soft print would fade this week's move.
- FOMC June 16-17. A projection meeting with full Summary of Economic Projections and updated dot plot. Markets will use the dots to recalibrate the cutting path.
- Prime stability. Prime moves only with the Fed funds target. With the Fed on hold, Prime should stay at 6.75% through at least June 17.
- Credit-spread divergence. If spreads widen even modestly while breakevens stay elevated, the inflation read becomes harder to dismiss. Tight spreads remain the disconfirming evidence.