Hawkish comments by Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell about efforts to tame inflation have deepened the inversion of the bond yield curve for U.S. Treasury securities, which many on Wall Street have come to view as a leading indicator of an upcoming recession.
Powell delivered the Fed’s semi-annual update to Congress on monetary policy this week and told lawmakers that the central bank will need to raise interest rates higher than previously expected because inflation has remained persistently high despite a series of rate hikes amid strong economic growth.
One of the most closely watched spreads on the yield curve is that between the two-year and 10-year Treasury notes, which is referred to as the “2/10 spread” as shorthand. The 2/10 spread has been inverted in July 2022 – just four months after the Fed began to raise rates last March.
The 2/10 spread reached negative 103.1 basis points on Tuesday – the largest inversion between those securities since September 1981 when the economy was in a recession as the Fed was raising interest rates to tamp down rampant inflation – and widened to about 107 basis points Wednesday.
For context, the 2/10 spread averaged about 84 basis points in recent decades. The 2/10 spread was at its steepest in March 2010 when it reached 280 basis points as the economy began to slowly recover from the financial crisis. The deepest inversion of the 2/10 yield curve occurred in March 1980 when it reached negative 199 basis points.
Paul Faust, the co-head of strategic accounts at BondCliQ, told FOX Business, “The current inversion of the U.S. Treasury curve is signaling the market’s concern of near-term inflationary pressures and the need for the Fed to act coupled with their concern of recession or weakness in longer-term economic expansion.”
Powell said that the Fed hasn’t made a decision yet on the size of the next round of rate hikes that will be announced after the central bank’s March meeting. The Fed eased the pace of rate hikes following its last two meetings, opting for a 25-basis-point hike at its February meeting, which raised the benchmark federal funds rate to a range of 4.5% to 4.75%. That followed a 50-basis-point hike in December that had been preceded by four consecutive 75-basis-point increases.
Rising interest rates on Treasurys mean that rates for auto loans, credit cards and mortgages will all tend to rise as well, raising costs for borrowers and consumers. They also create an incentive for investors to move out of equity markets and into Treasurys as they offer more attractive interest rates.
“Investors have historically compared 10-year Treasury yields to the dividend yield of the S&P when making investment decisions,” Faust said. “The dividend yield on the S&P is still close to historical lows at about 1.3% versus 10-year yields of almost 4%, a 15-year-high. Given recessionary concerns indicated by the Treasury market, the equity market looks to be the most at risk of a correction.”