How Relevant Is The Yield Curve Inversion?

 | Apr 01, 2022 05:14AM ET

Yield curve inversion conversations are dominating the media to the point it almost sounds like the start of a bad joke.

“A yield curve inversion walks into a bar. The bartender asks ‘hey, what’s got you down?'”

The conversations are primarily dismissive under the “this time is different” scenario. As noted by Yahoo Finance last week:

“Take a look at the August 2019 inversion. A recession did happen a year and a half later. But it was triggered by a global pandemic — something bond markets could not have possibly foreseen or predicted.”

That isn’t accurate as the recession occurred only 6-months later. Furthermore, the bond market did know there was something very wrong economically as the Fed was engaged in a massive repurchase operation to bail out hedge funds.

As we noted then, all that was required to push the economy into a recession was an “unexpected, exogenous event.” That event turned out to be a pandemic.

Notably, when psychology changes, for whatever reason, the rotation from “risk-on” to “risk-off” will find Treasury bonds as a “store of safety.” Historically, such is always the case during crisis events in markets.