The U.S. Treasury yield curve entered an unprecedented state this week, with one-month yields rising above three-month yields for the first time since the subprime mortgage crisis, due to investors' ...
The yield curve, which looks at the spread between the 10-year treasury note and the year bill, has been an excellent predictor of coming recessions since 1960, with ...
As debt-ceiling deadlock rattles investors, Treasury yield curve cracks are appearing. The Treasury yield curve shows extreme level of inversion, with a positive spread between 3-month and 30-year ...
Ahead of many recessions in US economic history, the yield curve has gone negative - or "inverted." Now that it appears growth could pick back up at the same time the Fed could start cutting rates, we ...
After a little over two years, the yield curve is back to normal. That is to say, interest rates on longer-term bonds are once again higher than the interest rates of shorter-term bonds like two-year ...
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Yield curve inversions happen when short-term interest rates rise above long-term interest rates. Inversions usually convey the bond market’s expectations for an economic slowdown or possible future ...
The yield curve has flattened and inverted in certain places. The difference between the yields on the 2-year and 10-year Treasury bills briefly inverted this week. Yield curve flattening and ...
A version of this article was published in the November 2015 issue of Morningstar ETFInvestor. Download a complimentary copy of ETFInvestor here. Flaw of Averages Duration, by itself, is a crude ...
Every yield curve "situation" has a series of people explaining why the yield curve doesn't matter this time, or arguing over which specific yield curve to care about. See thread and charts below.
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