Real U.S. Rates Are Elevated

 | Jan 10, 2017 11:19AM ET

The US 10-year yield fell briefly below 1.32% last July. The yield slowly rose to reach 1.80% in mid October. The day after the election, the yield initially slipped to almost 1.71%. This was a bit of a miscue, and the yield rose sharply to hit almost 2.64% the day after the FOMC hiked rates for the second time in the cycle on December 14. The yield backed off to hit 2.33% at the end of last week.

The difference between the conventional yield and the inflation-linked yield (TIPS) -- the 10-year breakeven -- climbed with conventional yield until the middle of November. Since the election, the increase in the conventional bond yield has not been matched by the increase in the breakeven.

This is depicted in the Great Graphic below, created by Bloomberg. The yellow line is conventional 10-year bond yield. The white line is the 10-year breakeven. The gap between the two shows the real rate (nominal minus inflation expectation). What is remarkable is the sharp rise in the real 10-year yield since the election.