(Bloomberg) -- The prospect of a rebound to 2% yields on the world’s benchmark bond is alive and well.

Treasury-market bears found a deeper message within Friday’s weak employment report that’s emboldened a view that inflationary pressures are on the rise, and could boost rates to levels not seen since 2019. For Mark Holman at TwentyFour Asset Management, the sub-par April labor reading indicated companies will need to lift wages to entice people back into the labor force; he’s expecting a break of 2% on the 10-year this year.

That level has come to symbolize a return to pre-pandemic normalcy in both markets and the economy. The wild ride in markets on Friday suggests Holman likely has company in his views. Ten-year yields initially plunged to a more than two-month low of 1.46%, then reversed to end the day at 1.58%. Meanwhile, a key market proxy of inflation expectations surged to a level last seen in 2013.

“When you put all of this together, it confirms my slightly nervous view around inflation,” said Holman, TwentyFour Asset’s chief executive officer. “From a bondholder’s perspective, from my perspective, inflation is the bigger risk. We’ll see more bear steepening of the Treasury yield curve,” with long-term rates rising further.