U.S. Equity Market Optimism Vs. Risk-Off Trade In Treasuries

 | Jun 09, 2016 07:04AM ET

Is the US stock market inspired by expectations that the Fed will delay interest rate hikes? Or perhaps the crowd anticipates that economic growth will chug along at a healthy rate, despite last week’s news that employment suffered a sharp slowdown in May. Maybe both factors are in play. Whatever the source of the renewed optimism that’s driving equities higher, the revival of animal spirits in the stock market conflicts with the ongoing and arguably firmer appetite for the risk-off trade in Treasuries.

Let’s start with the 2-year Treasury yield, which is widely followed as the most-sensitive point on the yield curve for rate expectations. Yesterday’s trading left the 2-year at 0.78% (June 8), well below the 0.90%-plus range that prevailed for much of last month, when expectations were widespread that a rate hike was likely at next week’s FOMC meeting. But last week’s disappointing numbers on payrolls for May threw cold water on that idea.