Two weeks ago, I was preparing nifty-looking charts to offer some perspective on our economic situation relative to past cycles. However, the world has changed in innumerable ways, and comparisons to the past might not be that useful. For example, there's increased potential for U.S. military engagement in the Middle East, yet oil prices aren't skyrocketing. This contrasts markedly with the months before the Gulf War, as crude jumped from around $20 per barrel to around $40 in August 1990.
While it's difficult to compare this environment to the past, it's also hard to make judgments about the future. Of course, the virtual shutdown of significant parts of the economy for two weeks has had a negative impact on the economy. That's a given. The key questions are how deep it will be and how quickly and strongly we will rebound. It's impossible to respond to those questions now. The answers will partly depend on the global response to terrorism and on whether domestic travel patterns pick up. These are two factors without much historical precedent. While predicting the economy is now even harder than usual, we can try to figure out what outcomes markets are discounting and, from that, get an idea of what the potential risks and returns are. Over the past week on the RealMoney Columnist Conversation, I've tried to analyze some of the factors impacting the bond market. Now is a good time to look at those factors cohesively and then analyze what they might mean for some of the broader sectors of the fixed-income arena. I'll start by looking at the short and long ends of the Treasury curves and then move on to some of the bigger spread sectors.The Short and Long Ends
Short-term Treasury yields, spurred by flight-to-quality buying and the lowering of short rates by the Federal Reserve
, fell to extremely low levels. In the days immediately after the attacks, long-term Treasury yields had also declined.
Last Tuesday, I mentioned before the market opened that I was considering taking some gains on my longer Treasuries and moving into something shorter. That thought was immediately followed by a sharp selloff, as insurance-company selling began to overwhelm a very thinly traded market. The forced nature of this selling seemed evident to me, because longer bonds weren't bolstered by the sharp declines of the equity market.
By Wednesday, the rise in long yields had become so pronounced that, instead of selling, I started adding a small amount to my longer Treasury positions. Only in a handful of occasions in my career have I changed my buy/sell thinking that quickly, and all were in response to extremely sharp market movements.
With short and long yields moving in opposite directions, the yield curve has steepened dramatically.
| Ten-Year Less Two-Year Treasury Spread In basis points |
| Source: St. Louis Federal Reserve Board |
What This Means
The pricing of the long end now incorporates at least some combination of only a brief economic pause, greater Treasury issuance and potential for higher inflation from the aggressive Fed easing. Yields on the short end incorporate some combination of protracted economic weakness, the fed funds rate
at a low level for an extended period, the potential for lower inflation due to a soft economy and the prospect for increased "safe-haven" demand to offset the increased Treasury issuance, which will occur not only in the long end, but across the curve.
So, if the economy rebounds, shorter maturities could be hit harder than longer maturities. If the economy remains sluggish, longer maturities may gain, while shorter issues might not have much juice left.
I'm now slightly above the midpoint of my target weighting for long Treasuries, and I plan to increase that if the curve steepens further on any more insurance-company selling.




