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The Yield-Curve Strawman And The Week Ahead

Marc Chandler profile picture
Marc Chandler
15.72K Followers

Summary

  • The US 2-10-year yield curve inverted last week, unleashing an avalanche of commentary about the significance.
  • The market is not waiting for the Fed to move.
  • It seems clear that the monetary accommodation provided during the pandemic is no longer needed.

Businessman working on Financial Report of corporate operations, balance

ridvan_celik/E+ via Getty Images

The US 2-10-year yield curve inverted last week, unleashing an avalanche of commentary about the significance. Simply put, market participants do not believe that the inversion is necessarily a harbinger of a recession, outside of perhaps a few

This article was written by

Marc Chandler profile picture
15.72K Followers
Marc Chandler has been covering the global capital markets in one fashion or another for 25 years, working at economic consulting firms and global investment banks. A prolific writer and speaker he appears regularly on CNBC and has spoken for the Foreign Policy Association. In addition to being quoted in the financial press daily, Chandler has been published in the Financial Times, Foreign Affairs, and the Washington Post. In 2009 Chandler was named a Business Visionary by Forbes. Marc's commentary can be found at his blog (www.marctomarket.com) and twitter www.twitter.com/marcmakingsense

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Comments (20)

Doug Smiley profile picture
The Great Recession happened three years after Hurricane Katrina so it may be 2 to 3 years for the next recession. It's on the horizon.
David de los Ángeles Buendía profile picture
Hello @Marc Chandler,

The writers that you quoting are examining the wrong yield curve. It is true that the 10-Year Treasury Constant Maturity Minus 2-Year Treasury Constant Maturity (T10Y2Y) curve has been declining over the last few months [1]. However that is not the yield curve that is generally followed to assess the likelihood of a coming recession. Most economists, including the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland (FRBC), use the 10-Year Treasury Constant Maturity Minus 3-Month Treasury Constant Maturity (T10Y3M) curve [2]. The FRBC has an entire research arm dedicated to the assessment of the T10Y3M [3]. This yield curve is stable.

The T10Y3M has historically peaked between 350 and 400 basis points (bp) usually two or three years after the inversion. It is just now only two years after the first inversion and the spread is only 187 bp[2]. This might suggest that yield curve has not yet peaked and a recession is not yet within the foreseeable future.

[1] fred.stlouisfed.org/...
[2] fred.stlouisfed.org/...
[3] www.clevelandfed.org/...
Aricool profile picture
@David de los Ángeles Buendía ,
re "This might suggest that yield curve has not yet peaked and a recession is not yet within the foreseeable future"
what about stagflation in this regard??? I sense the "misery index" being dusted off and soaring very soon, long before the Fed achieves a classic recession.
David de los Ángeles Buendía profile picture
Hello @Aricool ,

That is a discussion for a different thread.
Aricool profile picture
@David de los Ángeles Buendía , not really, weather it is classic recession or stagflation that hits consumers first is immaterial. Hence, if the yield curve and other data points to stagflation in the short term then all stock bets are off just the same...
c
The next recession will reveal the true consequences of our national debt “the party is over” no more government propping up of Wall Street Wall Street will have to find real value in real companies of which many cannot survive without Government funding
Marc Chandler profile picture
@claycool I don't kow what world live in. A recession typically drives down intereest rates. Not convinced that a recession wil prommpt the government to follow Mellon's advice during the Great Depression to "Liquidate, liquidate, liquidate." Nor do i see the US govenment "funding" corporations now. In fact, Corporate America writ large is a new saver not a net borrower.
bluescorpion0 profile picture
@Marc Chandler that just means hyperinflation
Marc Chandler profile picture
@scorpionblue I do not see hyperinflation in the US. Thought "hyper" is not defined. Clearly the Fed and the market surveys do not see hyperinflation, even if you do.
g
Thanks
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