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Flashing Red In recent months, there's been a lot of talk
about the inversion in Treasury yields, with the 2-year Treasury yielding
more than the 10-year note. That's not supposed to happen and suggests
investors are more nervous about the future than the present. It's a good
predictor, though not a guarantee, of a recession. Today brought an even more worrisome signal
for the economy. Now even the 3-month Treasury (at 4.04%) is yielding more
than the the 10-year (at 4.01%). "Such an inversion is very rare, but it
suggests that a recession is on the way or even here," Barron's
Lawrence Strauss writes. Barron’s noted in July that
when the 3-month and 10-year yields invert, a recession is a little less than
two years away on average, according to Dow Jones Market data. However, in
2020 with the onset of the pandemic, a recession occurred one month after
those yields inverted. On a closing basis, the last time the
3-month and 10-year yields inverted was March 2, 2020. At that time, the
3-month was at 1.1755%, compared with 1.085% for the 10-year. Read the rest of Lawrence's story here. |
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Tuesday, November 1, 2022
Flashing Red
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