Short-dated US Treasury yields will rise above longer maturities - a reliable forecaster of recessions - within two years and possibly in the next year, according to market experts polled by Reuters. At just 27 basis points now, the gap between two-year and 10-year notes is expected to shrink to 17 basis points a year from now, the narrowest since the early days of the financial crisis, as the US Federal Reserve presses on with interest rate rises.
And yet with two more rate hikes expected this year and another two or three next year, the September 12-20 poll of over 90 strategists showed both short- and long-term yields will rise only another 30 basis points or so in a year. "Yields on the long end of the US curve have likely peaked for 2018 when the 10-year crossed back below the 3 percent mark. The interest rate markets narrative has changed ... to one more focused on the upcoming recession risks," noted Guy LeBas, chief fixed-income strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott.
According to the poll, the yield on the two-year Treasury note is forecast to rise to 3.14 percent a year from now, compared with around 2.80 percent on Thursday. The 10-year was expected to yield about 3.30 percent. That would push the 2-10 year yield spread to about 17 basis points, not seen since June 2007, just over a year before the collapse of US investment bank Lehman Brothers triggered the worst recession since the Great Depression.
A majority of strategists, 34 of 46, who answered an additional question said the US yield curve will invert - when the yield on short-term maturities is higher than longer-dated yields - within the next two years. That includes 14 who said within a year. The remaining 12 said two to three years or beyond. Results of the latest survey of fixed-income strategists line up with a Reuters poll of economists published Thursday that showed a median 35 percent chance of a US recession in the next two years. It also concluded growth would slow to 2 percent by the end of next year, less than half the last reported rate of 4.2 percent.
"While we are not seriously contemplating a recession in 2018, a number of market signals point to a slowdown at the end of 2019 or into 2020," said LeBas, who expects the yield curve to invert in the next six months. "More importantly for our purposes, the interest rate market narrative is increasingly focusing on those risks, and it seems likely the markets will start pricing them in with lower long-term interest rates in the back half of 2018."
Longer-dated US government bond yields have not risen much despite the best economic growth in nearly four years, a series of Fed interest rate hikes and an impending supply of Treasuries to fund a $1 trillion budget gap bloated by aggressive tax cuts. Extremely low yields on other major sovereign bonds, along with poor recent performance among higher-yielding emerging- market securities, have also pushed investors across the globe into the safety of highly liquid US Treasuries.
This is taking place even as Wall Street is scaling new record highs. The escalating US-China trade war, which every economist polled by Reuters in a separate survey this week said was bad for the economy, has also put a lid on how high long-term Treasury yields are expected to climb.
"Inflation risk and Treasury issuance should push yields higher," said James Orlando, senior economist at TD Securities. "(But) if this doesn't get priced, the current pace of Fed rate hikes will cause the yield curve to invert in the coming year." While the majority of respondents said the Fed's current projected rate path as implied by the dot plots was "just about right", four times as many strategists said that it was "too hawkish" than "too dovish."
The trade war with China has also made forecasting the yield curve a bit more difficult. "I mean at the end of the day, if you get a full-blown trade war that creates a lot of market uncertainty, then you tend to get a flight to safety into Treasuries, which would tend to keep the curve flatter than otherwise," said John Herrmann, director of US rate strategy at MUFG Securities.
"But ... the risk to that logic is that on one hand, the trade war itself slows the Fed down (on) the front end, so it doesn't rise as rapidly," which would steepen the curve, he said.
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