The Implications of an Inverted Yield Curve

Similar documents
2018 Economic Outlook 3Q Update

Why is Investor Confidence Lagging?

Business cycle investing

Macro Monthly UBS Asset Management June 2018

Business cycle investing

The Mid-Year Economic Forecast. June 20, 2018

An Introduction to the Yield Curve and What it Means. Yield vs Maturity An Inverted Curve: January Percent (%)

The U.S. Economy: An Optimistic Outlook, But With Some Important Risks

YIELD CURVE INVERSION: A CLEAR BUT UNLIKELY DANGER

Baseline U.S. Economic Outlook, Summary Table*

Bloomberg Survey of Economists

Is the Flattening Yield Curve Sending a Message?

October 2016 Market Update

Economic Perspectives 2 nd Quarter Executive Summary. TRICIA NEWCOMB CIMA Associate, Senior Strategy Analyst

Views on the Economy and Price-Level Targeting

2019 Schwab Market Outlook

Fourth Quarter Market Outlook. Jason Bulinski, CFA Donald A. Powell, CFA Joseph Styrna, CFA

TIMING THE NEXT RECESSION

Investment opportunities in the late-expansion stage of the business cycle

Should we worry about the yield curve?

Perspective. Economic and Market. Despite Weak U.S. Growth Overheat Pressures are Mounting

Macro Monthly. Investing in a mature cycle. UBS Asset Management June 2018

ASSESSING THE RISK OF A DOUBLE-DIP RECESSION: KEY INDICATORS TO MONITOR

The Stock Market's Final Four

Explore the themes and thinking behind our decisions.

The US Yield Curve. Trending Toward Inversion?

Mid-Year 2018 Outlook

A year of opportunities

Economic and Financial Markets Monthly Review & Outlook Detailed Report January 2018

2Q16. Don t Be So Negative. June Uncharted territory

Assessing the Risk of Yield Curve Inversion: An Update

BONDS MAY FEEL CONTINUED PRESSURE

Economic Outlook. DMS Economic Outlook for next 12 months

Economy Check-In: Post 2008 Crisis Market Update Special Report

Diffusion indices of forecast risks in Summary of Economic Projections From September 2016 FOMC to December 2018 FOMC.

2018 Economic Outlook 2Q Update

Current Economic Conditions and Selected Forecasts

Illinois Economic and Fiscal Policy Report

The Labor Force Participation Puzzle

PCA INVESTMENT MARKET RISK METRICS. Monthly Report

2018 Convertible Outlook

Yields Will Signal The End Of The Bull Market

Economic and Financial Markets Monthly Review & Outlook Detailed Report October 2017

The Yield Curve and Monetary Policy in 2018

Should We Worry About the Yield Curve?

Reconciling FOMC Forecasts and Forward Guidance. Mickey D. Levy Blenheim Capital Management

Explore the themes and thinking behind our decisions.

2018 ECONOMIC OUTLOOK

Key takeaways. What it may mean for investors WEEKLY GUIDANCE ON ECONOMIC AND GEOPOLITICAL EVENTS. Veronica Willis Investment Strategy Analyst

Skyline Asset Management, L.P. Executive Summary Skyline Small Cap Value Composite December 31, 2018

Some Considerations for U.S. Monetary Policy Normalization

Keep cool as interest rates rise.

On The Economy, Wages, Interest Rates & The Yield Curve

Is it Time for a New Fixed Income Approach?

Fixed Income in a Flat Yield Curve Environment

2014 Annual Review & Outlook

Implications of Fiscal Austerity for U.S. Monetary Policy

As Good as it Gets Title of Goldman Sachs Research Paper, November 15, 2017

Cash Management Portfolios

Hurricanes End 83-Month Employment Expansion

Key Takeaways. What It May Mean for Investors WEEKLY GUIDANCE ON ECONOMIC AND GEOPOLITICAL EVENTS. Craig P. Holke Investment Strategy Analyst

Solutions to PSet 5. October 6, More on the AS/AD Model

January 25th, Dear Turtle Creek Client,

THE FIVE FINGER GUIDE: ECONOMIC DATA THAT PROVIDE A HEADS-UP TO A U.S. RECESSION

2014 Mid-Year Market Outlook

FOMC Statement: December th

INFLATION AND THE ECONOMIC OUTLOOK By Darryl R. Francis, President. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

Economic & Capital Market Outlook Third Quarter, 2018

Key takeaways. What it may mean for investors WEEKLY GUIDANCE ON ECONOMIC AND GEOPOLITICAL EVENTS. Peter Donisanu Investment Strategy Analyst

Monetary Policy and Maintaining Low Inflation. Mickey D. Levy Bank of America

Spotlight: The Economic Cycle. April 30, 2018

US yield curve and recession risk - watch the shape not the slope

Economic Perspectives 3 rd Quarter Executive Summary. TRICIA NEWCOMB CIMA Associate, Senior Strategy Analyst

MINUTES OF THE MONETARY POLICY COMMITTEE MEETING 4 AND 5 NOVEMBER 2009

Key takeaways. What it may mean for investors FIRST A NALYSIS NEWS OR EVENTS T HAT MAY AFFECT Y OUR INVESTMENTS. Global Investment Strategy Team

Key Takeaways. What it may mean for investors WEEKLY GUIDANCE ON ECONOMIC AND GEOPOLITICAL EVENTS. Luis Alvarado Investment Strategy Analyst

Are We There Yet? The U.S. Economy and Monetary Policy. Remarks by

The return of US inflation

Market Insight Economy and Asset Classes December Oil Prices Downtrending: The Real Global Economic Stimulus

Gundlach: The Goldilocks Era is Over

Mario Draghi: Monetary policy and the outlook for the economy

Gross Domestic Product Prior Reading Change Most Recent. Real GDP QoQ - Q4 (Final) 3.5% 2.1% Employment Market. March. Inflation.

Does Low Inflation Justify a Zero Policy Rate?

CIO Newsletter Overlapping Cycles

William C Dudley: A bit better, but very far from best US economic outlook and the challenges facing the Federal Reserve

FRONT BARNETT ASSOCIATES LLC

Threading the Needle. Esther L. George President and Chief Executive Officer Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City

Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (October 2017)

Global Equities PUTTING RECENT MARKET VOLATILITY IN PERSPECTIVE

The Outlook for the U.S. Economy March Summary View. The Current State of the Economy

Introduction: The Road Ahead is online! THE ROAD AHEAD Visit: plantemoran.com/roadahead

Inflation: A Threat or Not? Answers to Five Key Questions

Curve Ball - Is the Yield Curve Still a Dependable Signal?

January minutes: key signaling language

10-Year Treasury Yield Upshifts past 3% as Fear of Curve Inversion Grows

Diffusion indices of forecast risks in Summary of Economic Projections From September 2016 FOMC to June 2018 FOMC. Mar '17 FOMC

NESGFOA Economic Assessment Impact on Rates

Outlook for Economic Activity and Prices (January 2018)

The Yield Curve WHAT IT IS AND WHY IT MATTERS. UWA Student Managed Investment Fund ECONOMICS TEAM ALEX DYKES ARKA CHANDA ANDRE CHINNERY

Answers to Three Key Questions

Transcription:

What to Make of the Flattening Yield Curve Yield curve has flattened significantly; 2yr10yr spread has compressed from a peak of 2.91% An inverted yield curve has proven to be most accurate indicator of economic downturns Since 1960, all 6 U.S. recessions have been preceded by an inverted yield curve Yield curve inverts well before the economic indicators flag recession What Causes the Yield Curve to Invert? Longer Treasury yields tend to quickly rise to a range early in an economic expansion Fed pushes shorter rates higher as expansion continues, eventually above longer yields Fed has cited inflation fears each time as they have pushed short yields above longer yields Fed has continued to hike rates even after the yield curve inverted Is a Yield Curve Inversion Imminent? Yield curve can remain flat for an extended period (1995-2000) Many similarities between today s economic backdrop and previous examples Key differences Inflation expectations remain anchored Fed sees risks as roughly balanced Absent more evidence of inflation, Fed should become more responsive to shape of curve Any confirmation of inflation could be the catalyst for the curve to invert The economic data certainly do not point to a recession in the near term But... economic data have historically lagged the yield curve as cycle indicators The Counter-Argument: The Yield Curve Dynamics Are Different This Time Central banks have created excess demand pushing yields below fundamental levels However, Treasury yields have already diverged from other, high-grade, sovereign yields With 10-year near 3.00%, fundamentals playing bigger role in valuation than they were As yield curve flattens, 2yr10yr spread will increasingly reflect free-market perceptions 1

Risks Growing as Economic Growth Accelerates As economic expansions age, questions inevitably turn to when the cycles will turn and how interest rates will respond. The current expansion is no different with investors now questioning its durability, particularly given how long it has persisted. The question stems, in part, from the premise that economic cycles tend to play out over 50 to 60 months (the average length of an economic cycle from 1854 to 2009 has been 56.4 months). However, economic cycles have proven more durable during the Modern Fed era (1987-current), with the four cycles of that period now averaging 110 months. The current economic cycle has lasted 126 months. As the thought goes, the second longest economic cycle on record is surely due for a correction. History shows, however, that the durability of an economic cycle is not specifically determined by the passage of time. Rather, expansions tend to end when growth runs too strong resulting in the formation of imbalances (of varying types). It should not go unnoticed that the most defining characteristic of the current cycle has been just how slowly the economy has expanded in the wake of the Great Recession. The average growth rate of the three previous economic expansions was 3.7% while the current expansion has averaged a mere 2.2%. Because growth has been so tepid, imbalances have been slower to form in the real economy enabling the current cycle to persist. However, because monetary policy from the Fed and other central banks was so accommodative for such an extended period, there is at least one imbalance which has likely already formed - financial asset prices. Going forward, an economy that was already growing near capacity is now expected to accelerate; boosted by the relaxation of business regulations, the 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, new fiscal stimulus, and a more supportive environment globally. As it does, imbalances and the subsequent risks to recession are increasingly likely to form. Already, the Federal Reserve has shifted from easing monetary policy to spur growth to normalizing policy. While the policymakers of the Modern Fed era have proven more adept at managing these cycles, investors are correct to be wary of the growing risks. How the Yield Curve Changes as Economic Cycles Progress As the economic cycle has progressed and the Fed has raised its overnight target rate, the yield curve has flattened. Much can be gleaned from the shape of the yield curve. In a typical expansionary environment, investors require more return (yield) when making longer investments, a term premium. This is a natural phenomenon, a longer investment has inherently more risk than a shorter investment. Historically (1987 to current), investors buying a 10-year Treasury have required an average of 1.16% more yield than those buying a 2-year Treasury. This term premium changes depending on the stage of the economic cycle. When growth is weak but expected to improve, the 2yr10yr term premium has historically increased to between 1.50% and 3.00%. This is referred to as a steep yield curve. The increase in spread reflects both investors expectations that growth and inflation will be higher in the future and the fact that the Fed tends to lower short-term rates during periods of weaker growth. When growth is stable and expected to remain stable, the term premium declines resulting in a flat yield curve. Again, this reflects investors expectations that growth and inflation will remain steady 2

and the fact that the Fed has likely raised short-term rates as the economic cycle has stabilized. When an economic cycle becomes too hot, the term premium can become negative. This is referred to as an inverted yield curve. At a basic level, longer rates still reflect investors expectations for growth and inflation over a longer holding period. However, when the yield curve inverts, the Fed has invariably pushed short-term rates above longer term rates out of fear that the economy may be overheating. While investors may not be overtly questioning the durability of an expansion at the moment the curve inverts, it is implicit in the reality that they are willing to accept less yield on a longer investment than they will on a shorter investment. Moreover, once the fear is cemented in investors minds, the inversion can become self-reinforcing causing investors to prefer locking in longer yields in anticipation of a drop in interest rates. Most meaningfully for investors today, an inverted yield curve has proven to be the most accurate, most leading indicator of an impending economic correction. As of today, the spread between the 2-year Treasury yield and the 10-year has dropped from a cycle high of 2.91% (February 2010) to below 0.30%. The closer the spread gets to zero, the more concerned investors will become that the second longest economic expansion on record is near its conclusion. An Inverted Yield Curve: A More Accurate, More Timely Indicator of Recession than the Economic Data or the Stock Market There is no single economic indicator as accurate as the yield curve in flagging an upcoming recession. Since 1960, all six U.S. recessions have been preceded, well in advance, by an inverted curve. While there are a variety of measures analysts use to quantify how steep, how flat, or how in- 3

verted a yield curve is; the spread between the 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields has proven to be the most reliable indicator. The 2yr10yr spread has inverted four times during the Modern Fed era including 1989, 1998, 2000, and 2005; correctly portending three recessions. To put the yield curve s predictive capability into perspective, consider how much earlier the curve has inverted prior to recessions than other cycle indicators. The Conference Board publishes the Leading Index each month which is specifically designed to flag changes in an economic cycle. The index is an aggregation of ten different metrics which have proven, over time, to be the earliest indicators of changing economic conditions. This index includes data on initial jobless claims, the number of hours employees work, consumer confidence, new orders for consumer goods, new home-building permits, new orders for capital goods, sentiment in the manufacturing sector, stock prices, and the shape of the Treasury curve. In the run-up to the 1990 recession, the 2yr10yr inverted 19 months before the recession began with the spread falling as low as -0.44%. The curve first inverted 11 months before the Leading Index flagged recession. As the 2001 recession approached, the curve inverted 13 months before the recession, falling as low as -0.56%. Again, the curve first inverted 11 months before the Leading Index indicated recession. In 2005, the yield curve inverted a full 26 months before the Great Recession, falling as low as -0.19%. The curve first inverted 9 months before the Leading Index flagged a downturn. Even the stock market, which should reflect just as much collective insight as the bond market, has proven to be an inferior indicator of recessions. Stock prices have historically continued rising monthover-month and year-over-year well after the yield curve inverts. 4

One False Flag The only false indication of a recession from the 2yr10yr spread came in 1998. An exogenous global flight-to-quality caused by the Asian financial crisis pushed the spread negative for just 25 trading days with the spread falling only as low as -0.13%. Unlike other examples, the Fed was not actively raising short-term rates at the time of inversion. While their policy bias was for tightening, they had last raised their target rate 13 months prior. One month after the 2yr10yr inverted, the Fed changed its bias from tightening to neutral, restoring a positively sloped curve. They subsequently cut their target rate one month later. What Causes the Yield Curve to Invert While the most acute explanation for an inverted curve is investor preference for longer maturity securities, market analysis of the process shows that the Federal Reserve effectively hikes short-term rates above longer term rates. Longer maturity Treasury yields tend to respond to investor expectations for economic growth, inflation, overnight rates, and a host of other factors. As an economic cycle begins to improve, longer yields tend to rise relatively quickly to a range reflective of how high investors expect yields to eventually rise during that cycle. In each of the last three rate cycles, the 10-year Treasury yield has realized between 80% and 100% of its total yield increase before the Fed has completed half of its rate hikes. The range to which the 10-year rises in each rate cycle has varied just as investors expectations for growth and inflation have differed during each cycle. 5

Shorter maturity Treasury yields tend to more directly track investor expectations for overnight rates. Because Fed policy changes more slowly than market sentiment regarding future growth and inflation, changes in shorter yields tend to occur more slowly than longer yields. As an economic cycle heats up and the inflation risk grows, the Fed may prioritize snuffing out inflation over concerns about an inverted yield curve. It has been the case in each inverted curve during the Modern Fed era (except 1998) that the Fed, citing concerns about inflation, continued its rate hikes above the yield range in which longer Treasurys were previously trading. In 1989, longer yields were range-bound between 8.75% and 9.50% while the Fed hiked to 9.75%. It occurred in 2000 when longer yields were holding near 6.00% but the Fed hiked to 6.50%. It also happened in 2006 when longer yields were holding near 4.50% but the Fed hiked to 5.25%. In each of these examples, the Fed pushed short-term yields through the general trading range for longer yields, longer yields initially rose with short-term yields, and longer yields subsequently pulled back resulting in an inverted curve. Why Does the Fed Continue to Hike When the Curve Is Flat / Inverted Also worth noting, the Fed has continued to hike its target rate in these three examples even after the 2yr10yr spread has turned negative. In both 1989 and 2000, the Fed hiked another 1.00% after the yield curve first inverted. In 2006, they hiked another 0.75% after the curve inverted. Whether an inverted yield curve has causation or correlation with a subsequent recession, these historical examples beg the question as to why the Fed would continue pushing short-term rates higher knowing the po- 6

tential implications. Looking back at the economic environments, it is apparent that Fed officials were compelled, in each scenario, by strong labor data and rising risks to inflation. By the time the yield curve inverted in 1989, the unemployment rate had fallen to its lowest rate in 14 years and nonfarm payroll growth continued at a stronger-than-sustainable pace. Moreover, Inflation pressures were already evident. PCE inflation had risen from 1.5% to 4.2% over the two years leading up to the inversion while average hourly earnings growth had increased from 1.7% to 3.3%. In 2000, the unemployment rate had dropped to 4.0% for the first time in 30 years and job growth continued to be unsustainably strong. Inflation had not yet become a problem but the rate was increasing and wage growth was holding steadily above 3.5%. Market-based inflation expectations had risen, oil prices were up 117% YoY, and the Fed officially cited the heightened inflation risk as the reason they continued to push short rates higher. As the curve inverted in the final days of 2005, the unemployment rate had dropped to 5.0% and nonfarm payroll growth had rapidly accelerated to some of its best rates of the expansion. PCE inflation was already running hotter than preferred at a 2.9% rate and wages were expanding 2.9%. Marketbased inflation expectations were solidly above the Fed s 2.0% inflation target and the Fed cited the risks to faster inflation in their official communications. 7

Is a Curve Inversion Imminent? An inversion of the yield curve is almost certainly inevitable at some point. Economic cycles are cycles, after all. The more important question today is if the curve will invert in the near term given its accuracy in portending economic corrections. While the trend gives the appearance that an inverted curve is imminent, history also shows that the curve can remain flat for several years. More fundamentally, previous examples show that for the yield curve to invert, the Fed must believe that the risk of inflation is greater than the implicit risk of pushing short yields above longer yields. Considering today s economic backdrop, there are many similarities to the previous examples. The unemployment rate has dropped to 3.8%, lower than at any other time during the Modern Fed era when the curve has inverted. Nonfarm payroll growth has accelerated over the past year from a six-month average rate of 174k to 202k, an unsustainably strong growth rate given the aging population and its impact on labor force growth each month. But while the economic data have been strong, inflation and inflation expectations have remained mild allowing the Fed to maintain a gradual approach to policy adjustments. Certainly, the Fed is not yet in an inflation-fighting mode. In their June Statement, the FOMC officially noted that the economic risks appear roughly balanced. PCE inflation has risen to 2.0% but that remains in-line with the Fed s target. Market-based inflation expectations for the next 10 years are just 2.1%. Economists generally attribute the mild inflation, despite ample indications of tight economic conditions, to the inelasticity of wage growth. Average hourly earnings have held near 2.5% even as the unemployment rate has fallen well below what officials believed would trigger inflation. 8

Going forward, the Fed has projected a target rate path that would most likely result in an inverted curve. However, they will presumably need to be convinced that the risk of inflation is greater than their current assessment to continue on their projected path, particularly if it results in an inverted yield curve. Absent more traction in wage growth, or some other meaningful inflation input, it is reasonable to expect Fed officials will become more responsive to the shape of the yield curve as it nears inversion. If they are convinced that the potential for inflation is worth the risks associated with an inverted curve, investors should take note of what this has meant historically. Is a Recession Imminent? By all appearances, U.S. economic growth is accelerating. A confluence of tailwinds is boosting growth above what is expected to be sustainable longer term 2. Consumers are now more confident than they have been in 20 years. Businesses are more confident than they have been in 45 years. Tax cuts, deregulation, a record run for stock prices, and synchronized global growth have all contributed to a robust economy. In addition, government spending is now set to be accretive to growth after Congress raised its self-imposed spending caps for the next two years. The economic environment is very strong for the time being. As such, a recession does not appear imminent. However, as seen repeatedly during the Modern Fed era, the economy has appeared very strong as the yield curve has inverted prior to each recession. In fact, almost none of the leading economic indicators have flagged a downturn at the times when the yield curve has inverted. As such, an inverted yield curve will likely be the first warning sign. 9

The Counter-Argument - Yield Curve Dynamics Are Different This Time There is a common argument that the yield curve is not as dependable of an indicator as it has been historically. The premise underlying this outlook is that the markets do not currently reflect a freemarket assessment of risk and reward. Global central banks have created a surfeit of liquidity in the financial markets and the belief is that the excess demand is keeping longer Treasury yields lower than they fundamentally should be. More directly stated, longer yields do not represent investor perceptions about longer term growth and inflation. Therefore, if the yield curve inverts it is more a function of central banks skewing Treasury prices than the markets reflecting an economic turning point. While this argument has held some truth in the recent past and may prove to still be accurate, there are two factors which have weakened the argument. First, Treasury yields have broken away from other high-grade sovereign yields as the U.S. economy has accelerated. As growth and monetary policy have diverged between the U.S. and other developed countries, global sovereign yields appear to have had less and less of an impact on Treasury yields. The spread between the 10-year Treasury and 10-year German Bund illustrates an ongoing divergence. While there are a number of factors causing this, the most important takeaway is that global conditions appear to be having a smaller impact on Treasury yields. Additionally, with the 10-year Treasury now trading close to 3.00% and longer-run economic growth expectations of 1.8-2.0%, the argument can be made that the fundamentals are now the biggest factor driving valuations. 10

Second, foreign investors have a choice to buy shorter or longer maturity Treasurys. As the 2yr10yr spread has flattened from 2.91% to below 0.30%, the choice to buy a shorter-maturity Treasury versus a longer-maturity has become more compelling. Even if foreign liquidity is contributing to Treasury valuations, once the 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields are the same, investors (foreign or domestic) would have just as much incentive to buy shorter maturities as they would longer maturities. As such, the global liquidity premium on financial assets should evenly affect all parts of the yield curve. The closer the 2-year and 10-year Treasury yields become, the more the relationship will once again be an un-skewed reflection of free-market perceptions. 11

Data Sources: National Bureau of Economic Research - Official Economic Cycle Dates (www.nber.org) Congressional Budget Office - Long-Run Growth Forecast (www.cbo.gov) Federal Reserve - Summary of Economic Projections, Official Statements (www.federalreserve.gov) Conference Board - Leading Index and Subcomponents (www.conference-board.org) Commodity Research Bureau - Commodity Prices (www.crbtrader.com) Bureau of Economic Analysis - Gross Domestic Product, PCE Inflation (www.bea.gov) Bureau of Labor Statistics - Unemployment Rate, Average Hourly Earnings (www.bls.gov) Bloomberg - Treasury Yields, Market-Based Inflation Expectations, Oil Prices (www.bloomberg.com) INTENDED FOR INSTITUTIONAL INVESTORS ONLY. The information included herein has been obtained from sources deemed reliable, but it is not in any way guaranteed, and it, together with any opinions expressed, is subject to change at any time. Any and all details offered in this publication are preliminary and are therefore subject to change at any time. This has been prepared for general information purposes only and does not consider the specific investment objectives, financial situation and particular needs of any individual or institution. This information is, by its very nature, incomplete and specifically lacks information critical to making final investment decisions. Investors should seek financial advice as to the appropriateness of investing in any securities or investment strategies mentioned or recommended. The accuracy of the financial projections is dependent on the occurrence of future events which cannot be assured; therefore, the actual results achieved during the projection period may vary 12 from the projections. The firm may have positions, long or short, in any or all securities mentioned. Member FINRA/SIPC.