Posted by lplresearch

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

One of the more surprising developments in markets over the past six months has been the persistent decline in longer-term Treasury yields. This, coupled with the recent spike in short-term rates as the market has moved to price in rate hikes, has caused most measures of the yield curve to flatten dramatically. This can be seen in the chart below, where every rate inside of 10-years has risen since the end of the first quarter, but every rate 10-years or longer has declined.

So why does this matter? Well the yield curve has been one of the most accurate predictors of past recessions, with the yield curve inverting ahead of every recession since World War II. And while we are still a long way from a full inversion, logically flattening would have to precede any inversion, leading to investor concern.

But the more important question is, will this continue to a full scale inversion? Maybe eventually, we don’t think that is on the near-term horizon when we take a closer look at the charts of the individual rates.

First up, the short end of the curve, where the two year-yield jumped more than 10 basis points last week following another hotter-than-anticipated inflation report. However, despite that move, the yield still sits below its late October highs and is showing signs of exhaustion with a bearish momentum divergence in the bottom panel. We always want to pay attention when price doesn’t confirm or follow the fundamental expectation, and the inability to push through to new highs following that report may be a sign that the market has already priced in enough rate hikes, and suggests 2-year yields may struggle to push higher in the near-term.

But what about the long-end of the curve? Has it stopped going down? We think it has when looking at the yield of the 30-year Treasury bond. After repeatedly holding support just below 1.8% so far in 2021, that interest rate has pushed back up above the key 2% level in recent days. It may be a high bar to expect the 30-year yield to eclipse its 2021 highs near 2.5% anytime soon, but a move up above 2.15% would signal a breakout and point to further steepening of the curve.

The charts above certainly make a technical case for some near-term steepening, but the fundamentals support this as well from where we stand. We believe Fed rate hike expectations have been pulled forward too aggressively, which not only has had the impact of raising short-term rates, but may be a reason for some of the decline in the longer end, as an overly aggressive rate hike campaign could hurt longer-term growth expectations and curb inflation. We expect the yield on the 10-year Treasury to end 2021 near its current levels between 1.5-1.75%, and then to rise modestly in 2022.

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