Haver Analytics
Haver Analytics
Global| Dec 27 2005

Inverted Treasury Yield Curve Signals Less Liquidity

Summary

At 4.40%, current yields on 10 Year Treasury securities for the most part match the yields on the 2 Year. Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, and many economists, have indicated that the yield curve's ability to signal changes in economic [...]


At 4.40%, current yields on 10 Year Treasury securities for the most part match the yields on the 2 Year. Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, and many economists, have indicated that the yield curve's ability to signal changes in economic conditions has slackened as financial markets have broadened and become more complex.

Narrow Money, Broad Money, and the Transmission of Monetary Policy from the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond is available here.

In the past the move of toward parity, let alone inversion, of the 10-2 Year spread has preceded recessions in the U.S. Without fail it has signaled a marked slowing of liquidity and recently the growth in the monetary base has slowed to 3% from 9% in 2002.

The slowing reflects the effects of higher interest rates on consumers' inclination to borrow and spend as well as banks' inclination to lend.

Certainly, the U.S. economy is "awash in cash." But in a twelve trillion dollar economy such as the U.S., growth is determined at the margin.

  • Prior to joining Haver Analytics in 2000, Mr. Moeller worked as the Economist at Chancellor Capital Management from 1985 to 1999. There, he developed comprehensive economic forecasts and interpreted economic data for equity and fixed income portfolio managers. Also at Chancellor, Mr. Moeller worked as an equity analyst and was responsible for researching and rating companies in the economically sensitive automobile and housing industries for investment in Chancellor’s equity portfolio.   Prior to joining Chancellor, Mr. Moeller was an Economist at Citibank from 1979 to 1984.   He also analyzed pricing behavior in the metals industry for the Council on Wage and Price Stability in Washington, D.C.   In 1999, Mr. Moeller received the award for most accurate forecast from the Forecasters' Club of New York. From 1990 to 1992 he was President of the New York Association for Business Economists.   Mr. Moeller earned an M.B.A. in Finance from Fordham University, where he graduated in 1987. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Economics from George Washington University.

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