The Borneo Post (Sabah)

The ‘curve’ that drives Wall Street crazy

-

NEW YORK: The further it falls, the more Wall Street freaks out. The usually unremarkab­le ‘yield curve’ made investors sit up and take notice this week as it signalled a possible recession on the horizon, sending stocks plummeting.

The curve plots the difference between returns on long- and shortterm US Treasury debt, usually 10year notes compared to two-year notes.

T hat spread has been narrowing in recent days, and on Tuesday fell to 0.12 percentage points, the lowest since the 2007-2008 crisis, fuelling a stock sell off.

The phenomenon known as ‘flattening’ of the yield curve is worrisome, but it is the ‘inversion’ of the curve – when the two-year rate moves higher than the 10year rate – that scares the markets most.

That tipping point has preceded most US recessions since 1950, and the curve last inverted in February 2006 prior to the 2008 recession.

“My interpreta­tion of the yield curve is that the markets are clearly showing that growth and inflation are likely to slow next year,” said Karl Haeling, vice president at LBBW Bank.

This situation in some ways defies logic: in normal times, the shorter the investment, the lower the yield or return to investors.

Conversely, the longer the money is invested, the higher the interest rate to offset the additional risks, especially inflation.

But with hints the economy is losing steam, the logic is flipped.

“There is a good reason why an inverted yield curve shows us a potential recession: it means credit is very tight, and expectatio­ns for growth and inflation are reduced,” said Kathy Jones, chief of fixed income investment­s at Charles Schwab.

Short-term rates traditiona­lly move in tandem with changes in the Federal Reserve’s overnight lending rate, the Federal funds rate.

The Fed has increased the rate three times this year, with another expected in December, to prevent inflation from accelerati­ng.

That boosts the cost of borrowing for American households, and in turn pushes short-term Treasury bill rates higher, while putting downward pressure on long-term rates. But rising short-term rates also reflect very high borrowing by the US government which is largely using short-term debt to finance the rising deficit.

Recent news has contribute­d to flattening the curve, including a speech on November 28 by Fed chair Jerome Powell interprete­d by many as signalling a US slowdown.

The Fed’s target inflation indicator has held stable right around the two per cent target, while the recent plunge in oil prices by more than 30 per cent has eased fears of spiralling price increases. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia