10-Year Treasury Yield ‘Fair Value’ Estimate Remains Intact

 | Mar 09, 2022 09:10AM ET

The war in Ukraine has slowed the advance of the 10-year Treasury yield, but upside pressure is building as US inflation, already elevated, appears set to increase further in the months ahead.

Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve remains committed to start raising interest rates at next week’s policy meeting (Mar. 16). The market is currently pricing in a 98% probability that the central bank will lift its current 0%-0.25% target rate 25 basis points to a 0.25%-to-0.50% range. Additional hikes are predicted for the months ahead.

The most striking feature of monetary policy, even assuming several rate hikes, is how far behind the Fed remains relative to inflation. Core PCE inflation, which is said to be the Fed’s main measure of pricing pressure, is running at a 5.2% year-over-year rate, which is a huge 500-basis-points-plus above the current Fed funds target rate. Several weeks ago there was a reasonable forecast that inflation would ease, but such estimates went out the window in the wake of blowback unleashed by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.