What’s The Outlook For The U.S. Yield Curve?

 | Jun 28, 2017 09:55AM ET

Hawkish comments by European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi helped lift rates around the world yesterday, including Treasury yields. But it’s premature to conclude that recent flattening of the US yield curve – a bearish signal for the economy — has run its course.

For Europe, however, Draghi’s bullish outlook for the economy, accompanied by a forecast that inflation is still on track to rise, lifted yields on both sides of the Atlantic. “All the signs now point to a strengthening and broadening recovery in the euro area,” the ECB president said on Tuesday. “Deflationary forces have been replaced by reflationary ones.”

Draghi’s comments, which surprised the market, have been widely interpreted as a signal that the ECB will soon begin winding down its monetary stimulus program that’s been in force for several years. Although the pace of any tightening will likely be gradual, the shift in tone may turn out to be a watershed moment for Eurozone policy.

The news helped lift yields in the US on Tuesday, although it’s unclear if rates will continue to rise. The Federal Reserve is trying to engineer exactly that, but the monetary toolkit’s influence so far this year remains weak for longer maturities.

On Monday, before Draghi’s speech, the US 10-year/2-year Treasury spread fell below 80 basis points for the first time since last August, based on daily data via Treasury.gov. The spread ticked up to 83 basis points on Tuesday, but it’s not obvious that the forces that have been compressing the yield curve are no longer in play.