Wary Economic Optimism In The Treasury Market

 | Apr 21, 2015 07:12AM ET

The March report of the Chicago Fed National Activity Index reaffirms what’s been obvious for some time: US economic activity in this year’s first quarter has been soft. It’s premature to interpret the slowdown as anything more than another bump in an otherwise challenged and ongoing recovery. That, at least, seems to be the message via Treasury yields.

There’s a higher level of uncertainty about the strength of the US economy, but the doubt still falls well short of a decisive tipping point… or so Treasury yields imply. If the market was pricing in further macro deterioration for the months ahead, beyond what we’ve already seen in Q1, yields would be tumbling. Instead, interest rates seem to be in a holding pattern. That’s not particularly bullish for the economic outlook, but it’s not quite bearish either.

The next round of economic releases could be and probably will be crucial, of course. The data for April, in particular, will provide key signals for answering the main question: Is the sluggish trend so far this year a prelude to an extended deceleration that moves the economy perilously close to a new recession? Or is the latest stumble a repeat of Q1:2014, when GDP contracted 2.1% only to give way to robust growth for the rest of the year?

The Treasury market’s leaning toward a neutral stance these days when it comes to looking ahead. The U.S. 2-Year yield, which is considered to be the most sensitive point on the yield curve for rate expectations, has been treading water this month, bouncing around in the low 0.5% range and settling at 0.55% yesterday (Apr. 20). That’s well below the 0.7% level we saw in March, but it’s telling that the crowd at this point is keeping this yield in a middling range relative to rates we’ve seen so far this year.