The T. Rowe Price Group expects the yield curve to completely flatten in 2018. This is not a surprise as I have been commenting the same way for quite some time. The more important question is how? By yields converging up, down, or a mix?
Please consider Bond Traders Should Prepare for Yield Curve to Zero Out in 2018.
Just how much further can the relentless flattening of the U.S. yield curve go? All the way to zero, according to T. Rowe Price Group.
“The peak yield on the 10-year Treasury should roughly approximate where the final level of fed funds settles out, so that to us implies a flat yield curve if we assume the Fed will do two or three hikes in 2018,” Mark Vaselkiv, chief investment officer of fixed income at T. Rowe Price, said at a press briefing. In his eyes, the Fed will likely stay the course, and the difference between short- and long-term debt could reach zero as soon as the second half of next year.
Expectations are beginning to build for the Fed to step up its pace of rate hikes as inflation shows signs of stabilizing and with the lowest unemployment rate since 2000. Economists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. are among those forecasting that the Federal Open Market Committee next year will likely tighten four times, rather than the three implied in policy makers’ projections.
Hike Four Times?
If the Fed manages to hike four times, I believe we will see a strongly inverted curve. A few charts will help explain.
US Treasury Yields 3-Months to 30-Years Monthly Chart
30-year and 10-year yields have been falling as the Fed has been hiking.
US Treasury Yields 3-Months to 5-Years Weekly Chart
5-Year yields have been flat for over a year. Everything shorter has been rising, everything longer has been falling as shown in the above chart.
US Treasury Yields 3-Months to 5-Years Monthly Chart
This economy is nowhere near as strong as most believe.
Thursday’s industrial production report looked good, but even the Fed admitted that most of it was hurricane related.
No Comments