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How Much Further Will U.S. Rates Rise?

Mar. 03, 2021 12:07 PM ETTLT, TBT, IEF, SHY, IEI, EDV, TMV, TMF, VGLT, VGSH, SHV, TBF, BIL, GSY, VGIT, SCHO, GOVT, ZROZ, TTT, TLH, SCHR, PST, GBIL, UBT, PLW, TYD, UST, TYO, VUSTX, TBX, EGF, FLAT, TAPR, DFVL, STPP, DFVS, FIBR, DTUS, DTYL, DTUL2 Comments
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AllianceBernstein (AB)
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Summary

  • In past US economic cycles, the slope of the yield curve - as measured by the difference between the two-year and 10-year US Treasury yields - has steepened sharply during and in the wake of recessions.
  • The Fed plans to buy almost US$1 trillion of bonds in 2021 and is unlikely to allow the bond market to price in near-term official rate hikes.
  • If 10-year US Treasuries stay at current yields, they'll have climbed nearly 1% in a year.

By Eric Winograd

US Treasury yields have surged recently, buoyed by rising optimism about economic growth and rising inflation expectations. Based on our growth forecast, longer-term rates will likely rise for the next few quarters - but more slowly. And we think the Fed is prepared to push in the other direction if rates rise too far, too fast.

In past US economic cycles, the slope of the yield curve - as measured by the difference between the two-year and 10-year US Treasury yields - has steepened sharply during and in the wake of recessions (Display). Past experience suggests that 2.5% is the upper limit on the yield curve's slope; it has been higher at times but rarely for long.

The slope between 2- and 10-year Treasuries has risen during or after every recession since 1980, but never to more than 3%.

All else being equal, we'd expect 10-year Treasury yields to reach 2.75% over the next 18 months - based on the math of a 0.25% two-year Treasury yield plus a 2.5% yield-curve slope. But we don't think all else is equal in the current environment.

The Fed Will Be Pushing Against Rising Rates

The Fed plans to buy almost US$1 trillion of bonds in 2021 and is unlikely to allow the bond market to price in near-term official rate hikes. In our view, both factors will limit how far US Treasury yields can rise. As a ballpark estimate, the Fed's intentions might be enough to keep 10-year yields 50 basis points below where they would otherwise be.

Those inputs are translating into 2.25% as the mid-range of our 10-year yield forecast for 2022; for the rest of this year, we expect a range of 1.5% to 2.0%. But it's not likely to get there all at once. As rates move higher over the course of 2021, we expect a more gradual pace than we've seen in the last few days. Rate selloffs tend to be step functions: a rapid

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