Positive Yield Curves
The yield curve is used as a reference used by investors when comparing fixed income instruments beyond treasuries including government, corporate, and municipal bonds and CDs. Yield curves have three shapes, positive upward sloping, flat, and negative inverted sloping. A positive yield curve is upward sloping as shorter maturities have lower yields than longer maturities. This is because risk grows with longer time periods and therefore the reward should be proportionate. It is the most common and expected yield curve during time of economic growth. This can eventually lead to inflation causing higher interest rates.
Inverted Yield Curves
Inverted yield curves have falling negative slopes as short term maturities have higher yields than longer maturities. They occur when investors expect an economic slowdown as risk is greater in the short-term than in the long term. As investors seek safety in long term bonds, yields rise for shorter maturities. As investors move out of short-term bonds and into long-term bonds, yields invert. Flat yield curves are the mid-stage or transition stage when yield curves reverse from positive to negative and vice versa. Flattening yield curves happen as long term rates drop as short term rates rise on inversions, which is the early signal of an inversion.
Impact of Inverted Yield Curves
Inverted yield curves are like the Mothman sightings which are usually seen as a warning signal of impending economic slowdown possibly leading to a recession. This was the case during the 2007 real estate bubble and financial meltdown as the yield curve inverted in 2006 ahead of the recession. The last give recessions show that an inverted yield curve signals a recession six to 36 months after inversion. The yield curve briefly inverted in 2019, but the pandemic quickly steepened following the pandemic. Overall, the inverted yield curve has resulted in signaling the last five recessions in 62 years from six months to three years out. Critics argue that coincidence and not correlation with the inevitability of economies going through periods expansion followed by recessions.
Distortion of the Yield Curve
The 2008 financial crisis spawned the era of quantitative easing in which the Federal Reserve “prints money” by buying long-term U.S. treasuries to stimulate growth (and the stock market). By doing so, it causes yields to fall on the longer duration maturities thereby inverting the yield curve in the process. Or if the Fed is selling long term treasuries why buying short term treasuries to flatten and steepen the yield curve. Critics point out this distortion caused by the intervention by the Fed makes the inverted yield curve a less reliable recession indicator.
How Does it Affect You?
Banks use the yield curve tempered with credit risk to determine what rates they will charge you on loans. This will affect your credit card, car loan, and mortgage payments. Since yield curves precede recessions and bear markets usually occur in recessions, a yield curve inversion can set off market sell-offs as investors take a risk off stance and move into the safety of long-term treasuries. Many argue this to be self-fulfilling rather than correlated. However, the yield curve continues to deepen in 2022 as the Fed maintains a hawkish stance with its interest rate hikes