Why You Should Follow the Movement of the Treasury Bond Yield Curve
Why discuss the yield curve now?
The Treasury yield curve -- don't worry, I'm going to explain what it is -- has undergone an interesting and potentially significant shift this week. The 30-year Treasury bond's yield is once again higher than the 10-year Treasury note's yield. That is usually the case, though it hasn't been lately. This chart shows what happened.| Lower No Longer The 30-year Treasury bond's yield moved higher than the 10-year note's this week for the first time since January. |
| A Normal Yield Curve The Treasury yield curve on Dec. 31, 1999 |
would cut short-term interest rates to stimulate economic activity. In that case, short-term bond yields would fall in tandem, once again dropping below long-term yields. Investors in short-term bonds would face the prospect of reinvesting at those new lower rates. If they had bought long-term bonds they would not face that problem. When long-term yields are lower than short-term yields, bond market participants say the yield curve is inverted. The most egregious example of an inverted Treasury yield curve occurred in 1981, when short-term yields briefly exceeded 15%. The Treasury yield curve inverted in January 2000, and remained inverted until this week. Here, for example, is the Treasury yield curve on Aug. 31: | An Abnormal Yield Curve The Treasury yield curve on Aug. 31, 2000 |
| A Partial Disinversion The Treasury yield curve earlier today (Sept. 15, 2000) |
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