For those who may not be as familiar with the inner workings of the UST arena, oftentimes price action is based on what is being anticipated for the months ahead. This discounting mechanism can be a powerful force, as we witnessed firsthand from about mid-October through to the beginning of this year. The key underpinnings were the expectation that disinflation would continue to work its magic and the economy, specifically the labor market, would finally begin to buckle from the historic Fed rate hikes. These two forces would combine in not only a pivot to monetary policy, but ultimately end up with Powell & Co. cutting rates sooner rather than later and by a sizeable amount.
U.S. Treasury Yields
Let’s provide some perspective on just how optimistic the UST arena had become. By around mid-October, the entire Treasury yield curve was trading somewhere around 5%, with the closely followed 2- and 10-Year notes topping out at 5.22% and 4.99%, respectively. It was from these more than 15-year high-water marks that the aforementioned rally ensued. Ultimately, the decline in yield amounted to roughly 110 basis points (bps) for the 2-Year and 120 bps for the 10-Year, pushing their respective yield levels down to 4.14% and 3.79%.
So, what has happened here over the last month or so? Well, first off, the labor market data is not only not showing any signs of buckling, job growth has actually been coming in much better than expected. This point was underscored again last week with another drop in the leading economic indicator, weekly jobless claims. In addition, the disinflation trend that was witnessed throughout 2023 showed potential signs that the last mile to the Fed’s 2% target could be a more challenging task than the improvement that occurred from the 2022 peak in price pressures.
Needless to say, the Fed rate cut outlook has changed in a rather noticeable fashion as the policy makers have seen the same data and have collectively pushed back on the UST market’s very optimistic outlook for rate cuts. As a result, the UST 2- and 10-Year yields are now at 4.71% and 4.32%, respectively, retracing about half of that “rally for the ages,” as of this writing.
Conclusion
Against the economic and monetary policy backdrop that has been on display thus far in 2024, the key question is, what Treasury yield level represents fair value for the benchmark UST 10-Year note? Sometimes, it just comes down to the math, whereby one takes the 10-Year TIP, or real, yield and adds it to inflation. In my opinion, a real yield in the area of 2% seems reasonable, and when combined with a year/year inflation target of roughly 2.50%, that would put the UST 10-Year yield at 4.50%, or a little above where it currently resides.
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