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Treasuries

Why One Should Watch The Treasury Curve

Michael Brown
Senior Research Strategist
Feb 15, 2024
Of all the instruments and variables one can watch in the realm of financial markets, it is perhaps the Treasury curve that is the most important. Not only has the yield curve historically proved a reliable predictor of recession, but shifts in the curve can provide significant information on investors’ outlook for the economy, policy expectations, and broader risk sentiment.

It is for this reason that the continued bear steepening of the curve – where long-end yields rise faster than their counterparts at the front-end – should be attracting more attention than it currently appears to be getting.

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While that view of the curve in its entirety shows the bear steepening in question, zooming in to a segment of it makes things clearer still. Take, for instance, the 3m10y spread below.

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Of course, the most important thing among all this is what the bear steepening may actually mean, and its potential implications. On this note, we must dive down into the rabbit hole that is financial plumbing, and liquidity.

In layman’s terms, were the bear steepening to continue, as one may expect with front-end rates anchored by the Fed’s policy stance, and rate cuts unlikely until the spring, this should continue to increase the relative attractiveness of short-term debt (e.g. bills), particularly for money market funds, in turn likely resulting in a faster rundown of the Fed’s overnight reverse repo facility, usage of which has already fallen to a quarter of its peak level.

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This, overall, amounts to liquidity being drained from the market. This reduction in liquidity leads to two conclusions – firstly, an increase in the chances of potential financial instability, particularly as the impact of prior hikes this cycle continues to be felt; and, secondly, being a potential headwind for riskier assets to battle, with the link between equity performance and liquidity remaining a close one, as the below chart shows.

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However, while these near-term considerations are important, there are some longer-run factors that should also be borne in mind, particularly with the FOMC set to begin more formal discussions over the process of balance sheet rundown, and quantitative tightening (QT), at the March meeting.

The focus for policymakers remains ensuring that reserves remain above what has been termed the “LCLoR” – the lowest comfortable level of reserves, in plain English. While such a level is hard, perhaps impossible, to measure, it’s important to note that a more rapid pace of RRP rundown is likely to result in a higher level of bank reserves. In turn, this may lead to the Fed enacting QT for longer, allowing the current weaker liquidity backdrop to continue, and potentially posing a headwind to risk as a result.

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