Yield Curve
By: regina • Essay • 307 Words • December 25, 2009 • 873 Views
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A yield inversion effectively destroys the incentive for making longer-term loans. Historically, it has been viewed as a sign of lack of investor confidence in the nation's long-term economic prospects and a harbinger of recession.
But government officials, including Treasury Secretary John Snow and former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan, have insisted that the inversion now reflects boisterous global appetite for U.S. assets, rather than deteriorating U.S. economic fundamentals.
New Fed chief Ben Bernanke attributes the inversion to a global savings glut that has sent unprecedented flows of capital from all over the world to U.S. Treasurys.
The yield curve between the 2-year and 10-year maturities inverted for the first time in five years in late December, and has recurred a number of times in early 2006.
The last time the yield curve inverted was in 2000, before the last U.S. recession and a period of aggressive rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. The yield curve briefly inverted in 1998 during the Asian financial crisis -- the only time in the past 30 years that an inverted yield curve has not preceded a recession.
Thursday's highly successful auction of $14 billion in 30-year benchmark