Tuesday, January 19, 2010

The 4% barrier



10-year Treasury yields are a great way to measure the market's degree of optimism. When they dropped to almost 2% at the end of 2008, they were telling us that the market was extraordinarily pessimistic, in fact terrified that we faced years of depression and deflation. At 3.7% today, the market now thinks that while depression is unlikely, the economy is still going to be plagued by years of weak growth. If 10-year T-bond yields rise above 4%, which I think is likely, that will be a good sign that the market is coming to accept that we have at least a decent recovery on our hands. At 5%, the market would be telling us that the outlook for the economy was becoming rather robust and/or inflation was clearly moving higher than the Fed's 1-2% target zone.

Higher interest rates are definitely not something to fear, at least for now. They would have to go much, much higher before they became a threat to growth, and by that time the economy would be a lot stronger than it is today.

1 comment:

Unknown said...

4.Poland succesfully rolled out the whole 2010 foreign debt of 3 bn USD bonds in just one auction, in PLN bonds book was amazingly 3 times covered.
3.Residential market is bootoming in Moscow according to Kommiersant daily today...
2.Freight rates raising across the board...
1.Mr. Grannis is back.

BTW, what do you think of a Karl Polanyi "Great Transformation" book.