US Treasury yields are rip-roaring vs other developed countries. The bet is on inflation.

Which is it: Faster growth or higher inflation?

That's the question people are asking as US Government Bonds Pay More Than Debt From Other Developed Nations.

Analysts said the rise in yields in part reflects optimism about the U.S. economy and expectations for a pickup in inflation, which threatens the value of government bonds by eroding the purchasing power of their fixed payments. A market-based measure of expectations for annual inflation over the next 10 years, known as the break-even rate, recently reached its highest levels since 2014.

“The U.S. has the highest rates of everyone in the G-10 and it looks like the rate differential will continue to widen,” said Chris Gaffney, president of EverBank World Markets. “The U.S. seems to be going it alone in this rising interest-rate path.”

At the same time, economic data throughout much of the world has failed to meet expectations, eroding support for bets that the euro, yen and other currencies would rise versus the dollar. While investors speculate about the Fed increasing its pace of monetary tightening, they have also reduced their expectations for tighter monetary policies in Australia, Canada, the U.K., Japan, the euro-zone and other economies.

Higher Treasury yields are pushing investors back to the dollar, after they crowded into bets that the euro would rise versus the U.S. currency. As economic data has weakened in Europe, pushing yields down even as monetary policy remains accommodative, signs of employment and inflation growth U.S. have persisted, lifting Treasury yields higher. That shift has squeezed some investors, leading many to exit the trade.

Investors say they are also looking at the yield differential because the gap has made it increasingly expensive for money managers in Europe and Asia to buy U.S. government and corporate bonds. Those investors are increasingly looking instead to buy debt in Europe, where hedging costs are not a problem. This dynamic could make borrowing more expensive for U.S. consumers and businesses, and act as a check on growth.

2007 Decoupling Theory in Reverse

This reminds me of the widespread decoupling theory of 2007, except in reverse.

The idea then was the US was headed for the gutter and the rest of the world was about to lift off, led by China.

Today, analysts have latched on to the equally preposterous idea that the US can avoid a slowdown in China, Europe, and the the rest of the world.

Get a Grip on Reality!

Start with Reflections on Late-Stage Inflation.

Also consider Earnings Estimates: Yardeni Asks "What are Analysts Smoking"?

This material is based upon information that Sitka Pacific Capital Management considers reliable and endeavors to keep current, Sitka Pacific Capital Management does not assure that this material is accurate, current or complete, and it should not be relied upon as such.

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD keeps the red below 0.6400 as Middle East war fears mount

AUD/USD keeps the red below 0.6400 as Middle East war fears mount

AUD/USD is keeping heavy losses below 0.6400, as risk-aversion persists following the news that Israel retaliated with missile strikes on a site in Iran. Fears of the Israel-Iran strife translating into a wider regional conflict are weighing on the higher-yielding Aussie Dollar. 

AUD/USD News

USD/JPY recovers above 154.00 despite Israel-Iran escalation

USD/JPY recovers above 154.00 despite Israel-Iran escalation

USD/JPY is recovering ground above 154.00 after falling hard on confirmation of reports of an Israeli missile strike on Iran, implying that an open conflict is underway and could only spread into a wider Middle East war. Safe-haven Japanese Yen jumped, helped by BoJ Governor Ueda's comments. 

USD/JPY News

Gold price pares gains below $2,400, geopolitical risks lend support

Gold price pares gains below $2,400, geopolitical risks lend support

Gold price is paring gains to trade back below  $2,400 early Friday, Iran's downplaying of Israel's attack has paused the Gold price rally but the upside remains supported amid mounting fears over a potential wider Middle East regional conflict. 

Gold News

WTI surges to $85.00 amid Israel-Iran tensions

WTI surges to $85.00 amid Israel-Iran tensions

Western Texas Intermediate, the US crude oil benchmark, is trading around $85.00 on Friday. The black gold gains traction on the day amid the escalating tension between Israel and Iran after a US official confirmed that Israeli missiles had hit a site in Iran.

Oil News

Dogwifhat price pumps 5% ahead of possible Coinbase effect

Dogwifhat price pumps 5% ahead of possible Coinbase effect

Dogwifhat price recorded an uptick on Thursday, going as far as to outperform its peers in the meme coins space. Second only to Bonk Inu, WIF token’s show of strength was not just influenced by Bitcoin price reclaiming above $63,000.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures