ADVERTISEMENT

Inversion Jitters Aside, One U.S. Curve Is Steepest Since 2017

Inversion Jitters Aside, One U.S. Curve Is Steepest Since 2017

(Bloomberg) -- Voracious demand for five-year Treasuries of late is driving the short- and long-ends of the U.S. yield curve in opposite directions as investors price in Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts.

The spread between 5- and 30-year Treasury yields widened to 68 basis points this week, the steepest level since 2017. That stands in sharp contrast to the gap between 2- and 5-year yields, which has been inverted for most of the past four months, as well as the difference between 3-month and 10-year rates, which flipped negative last week for the first time since 2007.

At the heart of the divergence is a growing appetite for what’s known as the “belly” of the curve. Traders are buying 5-year notes in a wager that the Fed will lower rates in response to a U.S. economic downturn, according to TD Securities (USA) LLC’s Priya Misra. That’s not her base case -- she finds the market too pessimistic about the growth outlook -- but she agrees that purchasing the belly makes sense for those who expect a recession.

“It’s a classic ‘recession-is-coming’ trade,” said Misra, head of global rates strategy. “It’s a safer place for investors to buy if they think that the Fed is about to cut over the next year or so.”

Inversion Jitters Aside, One U.S. Curve Is Steepest Since 2017

That demand can also be seen in the 2-, 5-, and 30-year fly. The spread narrowed to its tightest level since 2016 on Monday, illustrating outperformance in the five-year relative to short- and long-dated Treasuries.

Traders have repriced the Fed’s policy outlook following the central bank’s unexpected downgrade of its rate-hike projections last week. Overnight index swaps indicate around 5 basis points of cuts priced into the Fed’s June meeting, and a full quarter-point cut by the end of this year.

It makes “perfect sense” to see traders drive a wedge between the two curves, according to BMO Capital Markets strategist Jon Hill, given the time-frame of a possible Fed rate cut.

“It’s a pure path-of-policy story,” Hill said. “Rate cuts are coming, but they’re not imminent -- they’re more likely to be in that two- to five-year forward window than in the next two years.”

--With assistance from Edward Bolingbroke.

To contact the reporter on this story: Katherine Greifeld in New York at kgreifeld@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Benjamin Purvis at bpurvis@bloomberg.net, Mark Tannenbaum, Vivien Lou Chen

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.