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Morgan Stanley Makes New Bet on Steepening U.S. Yield Curve

Morgan Stanley strategists added a bet on a steeper Treasury yield curve, seeing the potential for a “regime shift”.

Morgan Stanley Makes New Bet on Steepening U.S. Yield Curve
Monitors display signage outside of Morgan Stanley global headquarters in New York. (Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Morgan Stanley strategists added a bet on a steeper Treasury yield curve, seeing the potential for a “regime shift” in the wake of a rapidly improving U.S. economy.

“In the blink of an eye, that seems about how quickly the economic narrative has tilted in favor of a V-shaped recovery versus a slow and prolonged one,” Guneet Dhingra, head of U.S. interest-rates strategy in New York, wrote in a June 5 note. History suggests that, after a period when 30-year yields led longer-dated rates higher, it’s time for 10-year rates to become the key driver, he wrote.

The bank added a bet on the spread between three-year and 10-year yields widening to their existing so-called steepener trade call -- a wager on five-year, 30-year spreads. That’s after the unexpected surge in U.S. payrolls in May.

Morgan Stanley Makes New Bet on Steepening U.S. Yield Curve

“If upcoming data confirms the strong improvement in the labor market in May, curve steepening could continue as strategic trade,” Dhingra wrote.

Ten-year yields jumped by almost a quarter percentage point last week as bond investors came closer to their equity colleagues’ enthusiasm about the U.S. economy reopening. The increases have raised discussion about whether the Federal Reserve might adopt the kind of caps that its counterparts in Japan and Australia have adopted for sections of the yield curve.

Fed Factor

Morgan Stanley hypothesized that the Fed might “look to push back” against market pricing after another 25 to 30 basis points of gains in 10-year yields. The yield was around 0.9% as of 7 a.m. in New York on Monday.

Still, the Wall Street bank doesn’t anticipate that the Fed will adopt yield-curve control or some other form of explicit forward guidance at Wednesday’s policy meeting. Morgan Stanley economists see a shift to a monthly quantitative easing target, of $80 billion. The Fed is also likely to “maintain optionality,” or keep its room for maneuver, on QE going forward, the analysts wrote.

An announcement in line with these expectations isn’t likely to provoke much of a reaction in Treasuries, the bank’s strategists said.

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