The 10-Year U.S. Treasury Yield Could Fall To 2%; Here's Why

 | Apr 18, 2019 04:00AM ET

This post was written exclusively for Investing.com

The dramatic plunge in the 10-year Treasury yield over the past six months may have been no more than a taste of things to come, according to the technical charts: the patterns currently emerging are sending a strong signal that we could be on the verge of an even steeper decline.

Since November, 10-year yields have dropped to around 2.6% from a high of 3.25%. At the same time, inflation in the U.S. remains low, and the Federal Reserve has flagged it's unlikely to raise rates in 2019. Add that to the end of the balance sheet unwind, and the potential for the Fed to purchase up to $20 billion per month in Treasuries this fall, then throw in a European Central Bank in the process of easing monetary policy, and suddenly you have a recipe for interest rates to tumble even further — potentially even to as low as 2%.

h3 Technical Decline/h3

The chart shows that the 10-year yield is approaching a significant level of technical resistance at 2.62%. Should yields fail to break out and reverse, rates could fall back to a technical level of support at 2.3%. A drop below 2.3% sends yields even lower — perhaps as far down as 2%.

The relative strength index (RSI) is also suggesting yields will fall in the future. The RSI topped out at an overbought level above 70 in late 2016 and had been trending lower despite yields continuing to rise, a bearish divergence. Now the RSI is trending even lower, suggesting yields will continue to fall.