If the yield curve is not an indicator of impending doom, why is everybody talking about the yield curve so much?
curve curl barrel surf
curve curl barrel surf

STR New / Reuters

  • It has become trendy to insist that everyone ignore the bond yield curve, and how darn flat it looks.

  • The curve (allegedly) measures how risky investors perceive things to be, and a bond yield curve inversion can predict recessions.

  • Recently, the curve has been distorted by central banks' bond-buying programs, which have artificially made the curve flatter than it might have been. So the curve is a bad signal, some people say.

  • "This time it's different," a UBS economist told clients (in a tongue-in-cheek way). He called the curve signal a "myth."

  • Here's why you should continue to obsess about the curve: It can signal risk despite central bank activity.



LONDON — For an economic indicator that is allegedly not a reliable signal for impending recessions, people sure are talking about the flattening of the bond yield curve a lot. Recently, it has become trendy to insist that everyone ignore the yield curve. "The yield curve is not an indicator of impending doom! Ignore it!," they say. Of course, whenever an important person insists that the rest of us ignore something, that just makes me more curious about it.

The problem is that whenever you do look at it, it makes you think.

Hmm.

That curve sure is flat.

bond yield curve
bond yield curve

FRED

The yield curve, in plain English

The bond yield curve has in the past been a signal of an impending recession. When the interest yield on the 10-year US Treasury bond becomes the same as the two-year bond, recessions have often followed. The "curve" is the line that plots the difference between them over time. Right now that line is trending toward zero, or flat. If the line goes below zero — an "inversion" in which the yield on the two-year bond would be greater than the 10-year — that traditionally signals something is very wrong in the market.

Why? Because a flat or negative yield curve suggests investors believe keeping your money in short-term bonds is more uncertain than bonds that pay off a decade from now. Think about it. That position doesn't make sense. Why would you be more certain about 2028 than 2020? Thus, when the curve inverts, it signals something very risky is happening in the near-term asset markets.

Hey presto, recessions follow.

bond yield curve
bond yield curve

Capital Economics

"This time it's different"?

Right now some loud voices are insisting that this time it's different. This time the curve is wrong, they say.

Chairman of the US Federal Reserve Jerome Powell helped this view along when he testified to Congress in mid-July that the curve's flatness was not the most important thing about it. Rather, he said, it is what the curve says about the neutral rate of interest that really matters. The "neutral rate" is a complicated concept and we don't need to go into it here. But the upshot is, he didn't say that the yield curve was per se doing anything bad.