Inversion of the U.S. Treasury yield curve caused quite a reaction in markets and beyond last week. Losses of around 3% for the major U.S. indices on a single day were accompanied by headlines screaming about the recession signals sent by the unusual occurrence: investors willing to receive less yield on 10-year bonds than on 2-years, even though they were committing their capital and taking risk for a longer period.
Yet, there is good reason to believe that all this was an overreaction, and not just because the curve had reverted by the end of the week. It’s likely to invert again in the coming weeks and months. Let’s consider now why a panic may not be in order.
The most widely cited reason for the recession signal of an inverted 2-10 Treasury curve is that rational investors will lock up their capital for an additional eight years only if they believe that the yield on the longer maturity will fall dramatically in future. This would happen if the U.S. economy were to slow markedly.
That is certainly true. But it is not the only reason an inversion can happen. Two others reason seem more influential at this stage.
First, expected price appreciation is also a reason for investors to buy bonds even if the yield is low. Indeed, you need only look at what happened last week in Europe, where many bonds plunged further down in yield, driving the stock of negative-yielding bonds worldwide to over $16 trillion. And such expectations of price appreciation are supported by the high likelihood that a large non-commercial buyer – that is, the European Central Bank – is on the verge of restarting its large-scale asset purchase program while pushing its policy rates even more negative.
Second, bond markets internationally are much more connected than national economies. As such, what’s happening to U.S. yields is also a function of what’s taking place abroad. This was highlighted last week when the U.S. curve inversion followed the release of disappointing growth indicators from China, Europe and Singapore (including a worse-than-expected second-quarter contractionary GDP reading for Germany, Europe’s largest and most stable economy).
These two reasons also distort the traditional U.S. economic signaling function of an inverted yield curve for Treasuries – a hypothesis that was supported by high-frequency data that pointed to a healthy consumer, the main driver of growth in the U.S.
All this is to say that last week’s worries about a U.S. recession this year are overblown. But this is not to say there are no risks to the economy and the markets; and it certainly is not to say that the curve is unlikely to invert again.
A higher perceived risk of recession, even if based on distorted signals, can be dangerous if alarmist headlines lead consumers to cut back on their spending. And this would make the U.S. economy even more vulnerable to a policy mistake and/or a market accident – a possibility that is accentuated by the probability that the curve will invert in the future as Europe weakens further, trade tensions escalate and the ECB feels compelled to become more activist notwithstanding the limited likelihood of beneficial policy effects on the economy.
Second, the U.S. is not immune to a weakening global economic context. This is particularly true for corporations that earn revenue and profit from overseas.