Are Lower Yields Signaling Higher Risk?

 | Jul 30, 2014 07:05AM ET

A funny thing happened on the way to higher interest rates: yields took a surprising turn lower. The 10-Year Treasury yield yesterday dipped under 2.47%, near the lowest level since a swoon in late-May pushed this benchmark rate to an intraday low of roughly 2.40% at one point. There are several explanations making the rounds for the current decline in the price of money: Rising anxiety over escalating tensions with the Russia-Ukraine crisis by way of a new phase of convinces Jeremy Warner at The Telegraph that

European bond yields are once again on depression alert – and this time it is not just German bunds which are signalling an economic contraction to come. The Spanish ten year bond yield has fallen to its lowest level since the French revolution in 1789; it’s a similar story elsewhere in the eurozone.

Last week I told The Wall Street Journal yesterday. “We’ve got another round of easing on the way in September and December. That liquidity will continue to fuel a grab for yield across all euro-zone bonds.”