The U.S. Economy Might Be Entering A Golden Era

 | Jan 09, 2015 07:17AM ET

It may be a trap, but the recent slide in US treasury yields and the market’s implied inflation forecast could be a blessing that helps unleash a stronger cycle of growth. The critical factor, of course, is the strength of the US economy. So far, so good. The macro trend for the US has improved lately, and there are few signals that suggest that the positive bias is about to deteriorate.

The Labor Department’s employment report that’s due out later this morning is widely expected to provide a new round of data that supports the case for optimism. If so, the US economy appears to be headed for a sweet spot: stronger growth and low/falling interest rates and inflation.

As economic conditions go, that’s about as good as it gets. The combination flies in the face of historical experience, but for the moment it seems that the US economy could be entering a golden era. It’s all subject to change, of course, but based on the numbers in hand it’s fair to say that current conditions look bright. Consider, for instance, how the benchmark of US 10-Year treasury yields stack up against the US stock market (S&P 500).

Although equities have been volatile lately, the trend is still up, thanks largely to robust data in recent US economic releases. Meantime, the market’s inflation forecast (10-year Treasury yield less its inflation-indexed counterpart) is sliding. Quite a lot of lower yields and inflation expectations is due to offshore macro concerns and tumbling oil prices, but the result is still a net plus for the US… assuming that the American economy can maintain its recent growth rate.