Where are Long Bond Yields Going?
Posted on Tuesday, November 10, 2009
The Case for Higher Rates
- Massive debt issuance (over supply)
- Central bank diversification (less demand)
- Rebounding economy will bring inflation (decrease value of nominal debt)
- Near historical (recent history at least) low yields
- Pension (liability driven investing) demand
- Flight to safety
- Excess capacity and labor supply will bring deflation
- When the yield curve has been this steep, rates have rallied (in recent history)

In the second case, if one were to believe in mean reversion, history would indicate the yield curve will flatten in coming months / years. A yield curve can flatten (i.e. the spread becomes smaller) due to a fall in the long-end or due to a rise in the front-end (there are two camps on whether the Fed will hike rates anytime soon... I personally don't see that happening).
So what does history show has been the cause of flattening... the long bond rallying or the short-end rising? To see, below is a colorful chart showing the steepness of the yield curve on the x-axis and the change in the 30 year yield, one year forward, on the y-axis. The various colors show different times frames to show that each "lumping" isn't all from one period (each point represent the end of month figure going back to January 1986).
Notice any patterns?

The first pattern I notice is that the change in the Long Bond's yield becomes much more unpredictable when the yield curve is mildly steep (about 2-3% steep) and tends to be more stable in periods when the yield curve is either very flat or very steep.
But the money shot is that when the yield curve has been VERY steep (i.e. more than 4%) the Long Bond's yield has rallied in all cases (19 out of 19 times) the next year over three distinct periods (the yield curve was never this steep from 1996-1991).

Why? The only thing I can think of is that the yield curve becomes this steep due to massive easing by the Fed and why would the Fed cut rates so dramatically? A slow deteriorating economy, which has historically been the opportune time to own long dated Treasuries.
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Source: http://econompicdata.blogspot.com/2009/11/where-are-long-bond-yields-going.html
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