Conflicting Treasury Market Signals Keep Investors Guessing

 | Aug 21, 2020 03:44PM ET

Depending on the slice of the Treasury market, inflation expectations are rebounding—or the outlook for economic growth is weakening. One of these implied forecasts is probably wrong, or least less useful for estimating future macro risks. Higher inflation and softer economic growth isn’t impossible (think “stagflation” in the 1970s). But it’s not yet obvious that the conditions that produced that malaise are recurring, and so the odds still favor one scenario at the expense of the other.

For some perspective, let’s start with the market’s inferred inflation outlook, based on the yield spread for nominal Treasuries less their inflation-indexed counterparts. Using the 5- and 10-year maturities as a guide, the market’s assumptions about the future path of inflation has recovered to pre-coronavirus-crisis levels. That works out to roughly 1.5% for the 5-year notes and a bit higher for the 10-year maturities.