Is It Already Time To Think About A U.S. Recession? from freeamfva's blog
Is It Already Time To Think About A U.S. Recession?
The market
has a way of repeating history regularly, with triggers for the
narrative always slightly different, but the moral of the story almost
always the same. So it seems, given the recent curveball by the Fed at
last week's FOMC meeting, the yield curve has gone from one of
steepening to flattening. In the past, this action has tended to lead to
worries of a potential recession.To get more news about WikiFX, you can visit wikifx.com official website.
Clearly,
a flattening yield curve would make plenty of investors worry about an
economy slowing. This would likely prompt investors to shy away from
many of the reflation assets that have led the charge since the November
elections. As a result, the bank, industrials, materials, and energy
sectors would most likely see sharp declines.
The damage to the
yield curve at this point hasn't been too horrible, but it was enough to
send the Financial ETF (NYSE:XLF) sharply lower last week. It is now
down around 5.25% from its peak on June 7. The 10-Year minus the 2-Year
Treasury peaked at approximately 1.6% in early April and has since
fallen to around 1.22%, a decline of about 40 bps. At first, the curve
was flattening due to 10-year rates falling, but since the Fed last
week, that move has accelerated with 2-year rates climbing to 26 bps,
from 12 bps on June 15.
Over time, the rising short-end and falling
long-end of the curve will likely flatten further. It seems if the Fed
is projecting 2 rate hikes by 2023, that the 2-year yield has much
further to climb, potentially well above 60 bps. However, the 10-year
has been falling for some time, indicating that the bond market doesn't
see a long-term threat of inflation in the economy. The flattening curve
would suggest that the bond market sees an economy slowing in the
future, likely caused by tighter monetary policy.
This would be a
huge negative for the reflation trade in the stock market. These sectors
have seen massive amounts of appreciation in recent months due to
widening spreads and rising inflation expectations. However, the Fed has
essentially reversed that trade entirely in its recent actions. Suppose
spreads and inflation expectations continue to decline. In that case,
this is likely to move over to the broader equity market, with the
reflationary sectors seeing the most damage.
This story is repeated
regularly, with a flattening yield curve constantly triggering worries
among investors about the bond market's message. Of course, this isn't
to say these worries are likely to develop today or tomorrow. Still,
suppose that spread continues to flatten at some point; those worries
are likely to develop. In that case, greater attention will be paid,
eventually turning to the fears of slowing growth or, worse, concerns of
a recession.
Watching the direction of that spread over the next
several weeks could be crucial in determining which way equity investors
rotate their holdings. The more the curve flattens, the more the strong
rotations are likely to happen, the louder the worries of an economic
slump will grow.
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By | freeamfva |
Added | Jun 26 '21 |
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