What’s Up With The Deep Dive In Treasury Term Premiums?

 | Oct 05, 2016 07:47AM ET

The 10-Year Treasury Note’s New York Fed data , aren’t surprising in the current economic climate. The appetite for safe havens remains strong, largely because growth is expected to remain modest at best—in the US and around the world. But as the term premium ticks lower, the slide suggests that the bond market is moving deeper into uncharted territory.

One way to think about the term premium is to view its ebb and flow as a sentiment measure related to the various concerns that traditionally drive the bond market: inflation expectations, the outlook for monetary policy, and a willingness (or a lack thereof) to forgo the potential for earning higher returns in other asset classes. By that standard, the dive in the 10-year term premium quantifies what’s been clear in the years since the 2008-2009 financial crisis: the crowd is anxious about the prospects for economic growth.

To the extent that the term premium captures the mood, the year so far has been a milestone. As the chart below shows, the 10-year term premium dipped below zero in January and proceeded to trend lower in subsequent months, dispatching an unprecedented run in negative territory relative to the track record over the last half century. As of Oct. 3, 2016, the New York Fed’s estimate of the 10-year term premium: -0.57 percentage points. That’s modestly above the -0.76 reading that was briefly reached in July, but it’s reasonable to wonder if we’ll see even lower levels in the months ahead.