Treasury Yield Curve Indicates Recession Could Come as Early as Thanksgiving

 | Jun 28, 2023 06:32AM ET

  • Yield curve inversions, as we currently have, portend recessions.
  • Banks use time and credit arbitrage to make profits.
  • Our proxy for lending profitability is at 25-year lows, resulting in tightening lending standards.
  • This time is not different, but the pandemic-related stimulus makes it somewhat unique.
  • Leading economists, Federal Reserve Presidents, and most investors pay close attention to the shape of Treasury yield curves. They follow them, not necessarily because they care about the inner workings of the bond market. Instead, they are proven predictors of recessions. All six of the last recessions were preceded by an inverted Treasury yield curve.

    Most U.S. Treasury yield curves have been inverted for over a year, but investors and pundits are questioning whether this time is different. Might the current yield curve inversion lead to continued economic growth and skip a recession?

    We argue it’s not different this time, but the situation is unique.

    h2 Today’s Yield Curves/h2

    The first graph below, charting the United States 10-Year/2-Year Treasury yield curve, shows that every inversion since 1980 has heralded a recession. The last four recessions didn’t start until the inverted curve returned to a positive reading.

    The yield curve has been inverted for over twelve months and is much deeper than the inversions leading to the three prior recessions. This inversion looks more like the early 1980s. If we exclude the pandemic-related recession of 2020 due to its abnormalities, the average time from when the yield curve first inverted until the NBER officially denoted recession was 16 months.