10-Year Treasury Will Stay In Trading Range Near Term

 | Dec 14, 2021 08:48AM ET

The recent rise in the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield has stalled. It’s unclear if this is a pause before the upside trend resumes, or the early stages of new leg down. The sharp rise in inflation this year and the potential for an economic slowdown in the new year are conflicting factors that are muddying the outlook.

While this scenario continues, our baseline forecast anticipates that a trading range for the 10-year rate will prevail in the near term, in part based on today’s update of The Capital Spectator’s ensemble model for estimating the benchmark yield’s “fair value.”

The 10-year yield fell to 1.42% yesterday (Dec. 13), the second-lowest level since late-September. Nonetheless, the yield continues to print at a middling level relative to this year’s range.

The latest slide suggests the market is pricing in higher odds that the upcoming changes in the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy will slow the economy. In line with that profile, the 10-year/2-year yield spread has declined recently, slipping to 76 basis points, close to the lowest level of the year. A narrower yield curve is widely considered a market forecast of softer economic growth.

Note however, that the 10-year/3-month spread is relatively stable, leaving room for debate about the significance of the sharper fall in the 10-year/2-year spread. As long as the yield curve is positive (long rates above short rates), the implication is that the market’s assuming some level of growth will endure. When/if the curve inverts (long rates below short rates), that would be a forecast for an economic recession—a forecast that’s nowhere on the immediate horizon at the moment.