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Don’t Trust Yield Curve’s Gloomy Signals as Consumer Will Save Economy

Published 10/29/2021, 04:16 PM
Updated 10/29/2021, 04:25 PM
© Reuters.

By Yasin Ebrahim

Investing.com – Bond traders have earned a reputation as the 'smartest traders in the room' but their latest flurry of bets that have flattened the Treasury yield curve --  pointing to economic doom -- has left many scratching their heads.

The 10-year fell 7 basis points, to 1.54%, and the 2-year climbed 6 basis points, to 0.50%, earlier this week, resulting in a flattening in the yield curve to 104 basis points from 116 basis points. That's the flattest since late August, according to Reuters.

As the frenzied battle in the yield curve intensifies, the front-end of the curve is coming out on top against the long-end, causing the curve to flatten further.  

This flattening could be explained away by aggressive bets that Fed rate hikes, which impact the front-end of the curve, will emerge a lot sooner than many expect, potentially triggering a significant slowdown or recession.

“The bond market is basically saying that the Fed is going to hike rates, but because the fundamentals of the economy are weak, they may be risking a recession,” Zwei Ren, managing director and portfolio manager at Penn Mutual Asset Management, told Investing.com in a recent interview.

The latest rate-hike odds suggest that the Fed could lift rates as early as June next year, according to Investing.com’s Fed Rate Monitor Tool. The aggressive bets come in the wake of increasing worries about the pace of inflation.

While the jury is still out on whether the Fed is losing its grip on inflation, any doubt over the strength of the U.S. consumer has been washed away as the latest wave of earnings showed spending remains healthy.

This strength in consumer spending, which forms two-thirds of economic growth, will soon power up rates on the long end of the curve.  

“Eventually, the market will realize it has been too pessimistic about the long-term growth in the U.S., and we should see increase in rates in the long-end of the curve,” Ren added.

“Demand is extremely strong in the U.S. […] this kind of momentum is going to push the economy,” according to Ren. “I see zero risk of a recession in the next 12-to-18 months.”

The strength in demand, however, has come up against a proverbial brick wall amid supply-chain bottlenecks that has driven up costs, leading to explosive inflation.

While supply-chain bottlenecks are largely expected to subside, wage pressures hold sway on whether inflation will prove transitory or not. Against the backdrop of rising wages, the Fed is betting that eventually more people will enter employment, propping up the labor participation rate and forcing wage pressures to ease.

Investors won’t have long to wait for clues on whether the Fed’s transitory inflation narrative is wearing thin.

“The long-awaited tapering announcement is almost certainly going to be delivered [next week],” Morgan Stanley (NYSE:MS) said. “The bigger question is whether the FOMC will keep the ‘transitory’ language,” it added.

“We are leaning toward a yes, because removing it could unhinge the front end of the curve, and in turn cause an unwanted tightening of financial conditions.”

Latest comments

$100 for a loaf of bread will definitely skyrocket consumtion.
82% of the companies beat their earnings estimates after the estimates were slashed. Such BS!
almost every company that reported noted problems with inflation in their earnings report
Buy, buy, buy in this manipulated ponzi scheme environment, greed matters, not ever incresing government and corporate debt, not fundamentals, not long term and kids futures, just buy until we turn into a third world country, rich and poor wars ahead
the demand was high for copper wood paper 2 or 3 years ago, but at that time, speculation did not have UNLIMITED free 💰 nor the gusts given by the surreal fed lunatic liquidity policy.raw material are trapped in bullish bets, and the world is paying it!only rate increase will release the economy!
FED is not losing grip on inflation! It not only lost ! FED is the driver of inflation Train 🚆!
Lmao consumers will save the markets when you have Amazon and Apple saying inflation is negatively effecting consumer growth. And what was GDP again? Oh yeah like 2% missing expectations by a landslide. Mhmm suuuuure consumers will save the market when we cant even buy a house anymore and a mid-level basic commuter car costs more than some houses. Desperate attempt to pump here. Pathetic author.
Fed is betting on workforce expansion without continued wage inflation. Not going to happen anytime soon.
a loaf of bread costing $100 is gonna irate a good number of people...
by the end, consumers will pay for inflagtion so priniting more money now
let's go Brandon
Dont look at the giant hole in the roof… just think of it as a beautiful window!
I've stopped buying not because I don't have the money but because I refuse to pay the amount they are asking for things. I can imagine many many others are doing the same. The consumer needs cheap stuff to keep on buying otherwise they will selectively buy which is not good for us and bond traders are likely right.
and markets closed at record highs, go figure.
160B needs to go somewhere, when that goes away so will this insane market
Stagflation here we come. No products on shelves. High cost for what you want you cant find it
products are always on shelves but none can buy, the little money they speculatived under bubble system is not enough to pay a bills
consumer spending of last Biden checks, keep the faith
Meta is coming be afraid. The robot drones are coming. Meta is gonna rule the world and how you think, and what you think.
Demand is extremely strong in the U.S. […] this kind of momentum is going to push the economy,” according to Ren. “I see zero risk of a recession in the next 12-to-18 months.” Right.
Waiting for the trillion dollar coin to hold in my pocket so inflation makes it worth 6 cents. Remember zimbobwe.
Single reason. Madness by too many printed bills.
hi
They just add a few zeros to the treasury's computer.
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