Don’t Panic About Interest Rates

 | Jan 19, 2022 05:14PM ET

The panic of the day is the news about interest rates. The headlines state (correctly) that rates have moved up sharply in recent days. They state (correctly) that stocks have pulled back, noting this fact is due to that increase (which is possibly but not necessarily true). And they state (incorrectly, I believe) that higher rates are going to derail the economy and the markets, in that order.h2 A Need For Context/h2

This narrative is pretty standard for this stage of the economic cycle. The economy is growing, so the Fed, more worried about inflation than employment, starts to raise interest rates. Higher rates, mathematically, will mean slow growth and lower stock valuations. Cue the headlines.

What is missing, as usual, is context. As I focus on interest rates today, I want to talk about why the recent increase is not something to worry about. In subsequent days, we will get to the economy and the markets, but—spoiler alert!—the message will be the same.

h2 What The Data Tells Us/h2

The panic over the recent rise in interest rates is based on a couple of assumptions. First, we have the assumption that the increase reflects a problem with the financial markets. Second, there is the thinking that current rates — from which we see the increase — are, by definition, correct and the increase, therefore, represents a change from the correct rate levels. Both assumptions are wrong.

For context, let’s look at the past 10 years of interest rates for the 10-year Treasury notes. The current yield is around 1.8%, up in recent days from around 1.5%. That is a big — and sharp — increase, as you can see from the chart below.