Repricing US Treasuries For Eurozone Deflation

 | Oct 17, 2014 07:16AM ET

The crowd’s been repricing Treasuries lately on expectations that deflation risk is on the rise… again. But there’s no sign of it in the latest economic reports for the US. Why the disconnect? Treasuries, for good or ill, reflect fear and greed for a global audience as well the folks in Peoria. As a result, America’s relatively upbeat macro profile is an afterthought these days. Is that about to change?

Only time will tell, although yields did manage to eke out a small rise yesterday (Oct. 16) while the Treasury market’s inflation forecast ticked up. That’s hardly a significant U-turn after a month of persistent yield declines. But for the moment, at least, rates are stable. Ditto for the implied outlook for inflation via the yield spread on the nominal 10-year Note less its inflation-indexed counterpart: 1.89% as of Thursday. That’s up a touch from 1.86% on the previous day, according to daily yield data at Treasury.gov. The stock market stabilized yesterday as well, with the S&P 500 rising incrementally by Thursday’s close.