US Treasury Yields Fall, German Bonds, DAX Index

 | Aug 11, 2014 03:46AM ET

There are no economic releases of substance scheduled today for the US or Europe, which leaves a large gap between demand for new macro insight and the existing supply. Geopolitical risk was on the march last week and demand has increased for liquidity and safety. The revival in the risk-off trade has pushed the yield on the 10-year Treasury close to a 13-month low. Germany’s 10-year government bond yield also declined, settling last week at just over one percent, which is near a record low. Both rates will be of keen interest today, particularly in the absence of economic releases. Stock markets around the world will also be crucial proxies for evaluating the crowd’s risk tolerance as the week kicks off. With that in mind, early trading in Germany’s DAX Index today will provide the first major clue on sentiment from Europe’s perspective.

US: 10-year Treasury Yield The resumption of US military activity in Iraq late last week was part of a mix of events that shifted the overall tone in markets to a risk-off bias. The canary in this coal mine is the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield, which briefly traded under 2.40 percent on Friday for the first time since June 2013 before settling at 2.44 percent at the close for the week.


The decline in yield is striking because it contrasts with the generally upbeat macro trend for the US economy, including last week’s news that the four-week average of initial jobless claims dropped to an eight-year low. If the Treasury market reflected economic data exclusively, yields would almost certainly be higher, perhaps much higher. Indeed, the data for a range of indicators look encouraging – considerably better, in fact, compared with the numbers earlier in the year, when the harsh winter was taking a toll. But the improvement in macro isn’t showing up in the 10-year yield at the moment, which is lower by nearly 60 basis points since the start of the year.

Note too, that the market's inflation outlook remains stable in the low-2 percent range, or roughly in line with the Federal Reserve Bank's target. The fact that the risk of disinflation/deflation appears low is another reason to think the decline in yield lately is a reflection of geopolitical risk rather than worries about the macro trend in the US.

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US stocks, on the other hand, seem to be focused on the encouraging fundamentals. The S&P 500, after a rough start, managed to eke out a small gain, advancing 0.3 percent last week. “What is going on here is right now these geopolitical events are kind of limited to these regions and haven't really spread materially to the US or other major markets, but there is the potential for that to happen," Jeff Kravetz, regional investment director at US Bank Wealth Management in Phoenix, told Reuters on Friday. “It kind of defies logic that we've got the stock market rallying today and going into the weekend that we don't have traders making more conservative moves.”

Logical or not, the question is whether geopolitical risk and other factors will continue to weigh on rates. The answer will, of course, align closely with the headlines in the hours and days to come. But for good or ill, the 10-year yield will be on everyone’s short list of indicators to watch this week as the markets sort out what the dangerous summer has in store for the economic trend in the US and elsewhere.