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This Time Is Different for the Yield Curve? They Said That Last Time

This Time Is Different for the Yield Curve? They Said That Last Time

(Bloomberg) -- “This time is different.”

That famous line, which mutual-fund legend Sir John Templeton once called “among the four most costly words in the annals of investing,” is back in fashion these days when it comes to the Treasury yield curve. Skeptics from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to Morgan Stanley Investment Management say the curve’s recessionary signals may be distorted now as a result of central-bank policy that’s kept interest rates exceptionally low since the financial crisis.

Is it deja vu all over again? More than a decade ago, then-Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke dismissed the curve’s predictive powers after two of the most widely watched yield spreads inverted and then went flat. In Bernanke’s camp were then-Treasury Secretary John W. Snow and bond king Bill Gross. And we all now what happened next. That time was famously NOT different.

“People may say ‘this time is different’ due to quantitative easing, but this is a signal that’s been extremely strong,” said Charles Luke, whose team manages almost $21 billion in fixed-income assets for City National Rochdale in New York. “People who are not giving as much weight to it are missing the boat.”

The fact that yields on 10-year Treasuries are now back above those on three-month bills, after spending much of last week below, should not be mistaken as an all-clear signal. That type of “mini-inversion,” lasting one to eight days, can be a precursor to a longer-term episode, according to Luke, who has analyzed the history of inversions.

This Time Is Different for the Yield Curve? They Said That Last Time

A flashback to what some policy makers and investors were saying in 2006 and 2007, after the 2-year/10-year and 3-month/10-year spreads had started to flash warnings, reveals some arguments that sound similar to today’s skepticism that inversions signal an upcoming recession.

‘Reality Checks’

In one of his first major speeches at the helm of the Federal Reserve, Bernanke told the Economic Club of New York in March 2006 that he “would not interpret the currently very flat yield curve as indicating a significant economic slowdown to come.” Instead, he favored using multiple sources of information, along with “frequent reality checks,” so that “we are less likely to be misled when a favored variable behaves in an unusual manner.”

Now a distinguished fellow in residence at the Brookings Institution in Washington, Bernanke declined a request last week for further comment on his 2006 remarks.

‘No Reason for Great Alarm’

Then-Treasury secretary Snow said in a Jan. 6, 2006, interview that “there’s no reason for great alarm” after the 2-year/10-year spread had returned to flat from an inversion the prior month. With rates low at both the front and long end, “the yield curve under these circumstances doesn’t foretell anything ominous for the economy.” Snow, now chairman of Cerberus Capital Management, said Tuesday that he stands by his statement.

Dismissals of the curve’s warning signal back then were not confined to the Washington beltway. Bill Gross, then-manager of the world’s biggest bond fund and co-founder of Pacific Investment Management Co., said in a January 2007 interview that the shape of the curve wasn’t as accurate a recession predictor as it once was because demand for Treasuries by foreign central banks had distorted the traditional relationship.

“I don’t think I’m concerned with it,” Gross said. “I don’t think Bernanke’s concerned with it.” Gross, who announced his retirement from Janus Henderson Group Plc in February, did not respond to a request for comment.

‘Silliness’

Worries about an inverted 2-year/10-year curve amounted to “silliness,” Lou Crandall, chief economist of Wrightson ICAP in New York, wrote in a January 2006 note. In fact, few economists were standing by the theory that yield-curve inversions signaled a recession.

“Ouch,” Crandall said Tuesday in reaction to his own 2006 views. “Forced to choose a simple yes-or-no answer, I would say that I still take that general view -- though with a little more nuance than just writing it off as ‘silliness’ in a throwaway line,” he wrote in an email. Inverted yield curves are “symptomatic” of late-cycle conditions when recessions are more likely and not “concrete” signals, he said. The decline in long-term yields over recent months “has made a recession less likely rather than more,” Crandall added.

‘Run for the Exits’

Not everyone at the time agreed an inverted curve should be ignored. Inversion is “a horse with a track record we would rather not go against,” David Rosenberg, then-chief North American economist at Merrill Lynch & Co., told clients in January 2006. That same month, James F. Smith, a professor at the University of North Carolina and the U.S. bond market’s most accurate forecaster back then, was quoted as saying that “when the curve inverts, run for the exits.”

Then, as now, some analysts pointed to the negative effect the inversion would have on banks.

“People say it’s going to be different this time because of the low level of interest rates; what that argument misses is the fact that somebody has to make money lending money,” Marc Seidner, then-director of active core strategies at Standish Mellon Asset Management, said in a January 2006 interview. “The yield curve matters because financial institutions make money by borrowing at low short-term interest rates and lending at higher long-term interest rates,” said Seidner, who is now at Pimco. When the gap narrows, “one cannot profitably borrow short and lend long, and the incentive to do that diminishes. If there’s less borrowing activity, people aren’t investing in future growth.”

‘Intellectually Inert’

Some who dismissed the yield curve last time are sticking to their guns and dismissing it again. John Silvia, then-chief economist of Wachovia Corp., wrote an August 2006 note that called believers in the curve’s signal “intellectually inert.” “The fact that something, at some time, precedes something else, sometime in the future, does not mean rainy days actually predict sunny days.”

Now with Dynamic Economic Strategy in Charlotte, Silvia stood by his quotes in a phone interview last week.

“I said it, I believed it, and that’s it,” Silvia said. Research he did while at Wells Fargo & Co. in the last two to three years found the curve “doesn’t add any value to the predictive power of the equation in terms of forecasting recessions. End of story.”

--With assistance from Emily Barrett.

To contact the reporter on this story: Vivien Lou Chen in San Francisco at vchen1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Benjamin Purvis at bpurvis@bloomberg.net, Michael P. Regan

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