Investors Are Growing More Concerned As Parts Of The Yield Curve Start To Steepen

 | Jun 28, 2019 01:27AM ET

  • While the so-called yield curve remains partially inverted, some portions of the curve are getting steeper at an alarming pace.
  • “A far more immediate and present danger of recession occurs when after inversion, a rapid steepening occurs. That event usually informs investors the cycle is over and it is time to flee for the hills,” says Albert Edwards, the Societe Generale market strategist. Others on Wall Street are warning of this as well.
  • Ever since the mid-1980s, significant drawdowns in stocks started only when the yield curve began steepening after being inverted, Goldman Sachs) had warned in March.
  • When the yield curve inverted (short-term Treasury rates rise above long-term yields) earlier this year, investors began worrying it was signaling a recession.

    Now months after staying inverted, yields on parts of the curve are starting to steepen, or show a greater difference in value, a sequence which could be the true sign of economic trouble ahead, some on Wall Street said.

    Normally, a steepening would be a sign of higher growth; however, it’s considered a trouble sign when the curve steepening happens because of a more dramatic drop on shorter-term debt yields.

    “A far more immediate and present danger of recession occurs when after inversion, a rapid steepening occurs. That event usually informs investors the cycle is over and it is time to flee for the hills,” Albert Edwards, a Societe Generale (PA:SOGN) market analyst, said in a note on Thursday.

    “The final recessionary shoe has now fallen… Rapid curve steepening is now occurring, suggesting recession may indeed either be imminent or else it has already arrived,” he said.