The Long Decline In Yields Has To End

 | Jul 08, 2016 07:52AM ET

The 10-year Treasury yield yesterday took a breather from plumbing new record lows, but it’s not obvious that the 35-year slide in interest rates is over. The benchmark rate ticked up to 1.40% yesterday (July 8) via Treasury.gov’s daily data, a whisker above Monday’s all-time low of 1.37%. All the usual caveats apply for deciding if even lower yields are coming. But if the rest of the world offers a clue (such as the expanding tide of negative rates), it’s premature to bet against a multi-generational trend that’s confounded almost everyone who studies the bond market.

The slow grind lower in 10-year yields, in the US and around the world, is the byproduct of a powerful secular forces that have been fueled by several factors through the years. From financial crisis to recessions to fears of deflation and stumbling growth and the liquidity injections from central banks, the inexorable decline in the price of money has been a staple on the financial landscape since Ronald Reagan sat in the White House. At almost every step of the way, pundits have declared that the jig was up and rates were due to soar, and every time they’ve been wrong. Maybe it’s finally different this time, but the hints that growth everywhere is decelerating doesn’t make a convincing case that the 35-year-old bull market in Treasuries is about to hit a wall.