There are several places on the web where you can watch a short time-lapse video that shows the recent history of the yield curve. One of those places is Fidelity’s Historical Yield Curve page.

In reviewing the history of the yield curve on the Fidelity site, I was surprised to see that the current yield curve is almost identical to the yield curve as it stood on May 2003. This may just be a historical coincidence, but May 2003 also represents the beginning of the five-year bull market that followed the 2002-2003 bottom. In the graphic below, I have added a blue arrow to mark May 2003, which just happens to be the time that the SPX started making higher highs and confirming that a bullish move was underway.

Recall that the inverted yield curve which began in 2006 and caused considerable consternation among investors turned out to be an excellent – if somewhat early – predictor of the coming stock market top and subsequent economic malaise. Historically a steep yield curve, such as the one we have at present and saw in May 2003, has generally been a harbinger of better times ahead and is often found at the beginning of economic expansions. (Click to enlarge.)

Bill Luby

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This article has 5 comments:

  •  
    Apr 30 05:11 PM
    The yield curve may point to an expansion, or it may not. Just another one of a million pieces of trivia which may or may not prove of value to investors.
  •  
    Apr 30 05:20 PM
    Interesting. cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayIS...
  •  
    Apr 30 06:00 PM
    What's interesting about spam?
  •  
    Apr 30 06:18 PM
    This article represents still another tip-off. To me, everything seems like a bottom has been hit: financial and homebuilder ETF's no longer crumble at bad news; mutual fund redemptions by the masses continue en masse; market sentiment remains totally negative even as we've had not a bad 2 months (nobody seems to notice); the fed has cut rates and apparently is ending the cuts; recession is here (and contrary to what the uneducated think, that's usually the bottom of the market); gold is plunging (and I believe oil will follow shortly). Nobody seems to see all this, and that is the biggest reason why we are about to see a sharp rise in the market. A multi-year bull market? i'm not clairvoyant. But I know an intermediate bottom when I see it, and we are at it.
  •  
    May 01 04:10 PM
    Steep yield curve can also mean hight inflation expectations
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