I think that I saw interest rate data on CNBC this morning suggesting that the yield curve in the United States has been flattening when looking at federal government debt instruments with relatively short terms to maturity. The difference between the interest rate on the two-year U.S. Treasury note and the interest rate on the five-year U.S. Treasury note (in this case, the five-year rate minus the two-year rate) has fallen to less than +0.060 percentage points, based on my calculations. What does this yield gap indicate about expectations for future interest rates? What does this suggest for future U.S. economic growth? Will this impact the Federal Open Market Committee's decision on whether or not to change its federal funds rate target?
My understanding is that more focus is placed on the difference between the two-year U.S. Treasury rate and the ten-year U.S. Treasury rate. However, could the slope of the yield curve based on the two-year rate and the five-year rate growing less steep indicate that the difference between the two-year rate and the ten-year rate will flatten relatively soon?
From an expectations theory perspective alone (so that there is no liquidity premium required for longer terms to maturity), the yield curve growing less steep between the two-year and five-year time horizons indicates that market participants anticipate a smaller increase in interest rates over that time horizon than before. However, if lenders require a liquidity premium for longer-term loans, then could this narrow difference between interest rates suggest that market participants already expect a decrease in future short-term rates for loans that will be made two years from now? If so, then does that imply that market participants are forecasting a growth slowdown or a recession in the United States?
(Readers may consider money and banking textbooks such as those by Mishkin (2004) and Burton and Lombra (2006) for more information about expectations theory and the liquidity premium. They can also consider such sources for more about preferred habitats and the segmented markets theory as they may also relate to interest rate determination.)
Wednesday, November 28, 2018
Tuesday, November 13, 2018
SOME THOUGHTS ON RECENT INCREASES IN U.S. M1 VELOCITY
Data available on the web page of the Bureau of
Economic Analysis (www.bea.gov) and elsewhere show that real GDP in the U.S.
increased in the second and third quarters of 2018 at a faster rate than it increased
since the second and third quarters of 2014.
Although it has received much less attention, data accessible from web
pages such as the Saint Louis Federal Reserve section of www.economagic.com also
show that the velocity of the U.S. M1 money supply has increased for
consecutive quarters, the two quarters before the current quarter, for the
first time in perhaps roughly a decade. Was
this the end of a period of approximately ten years when the velocity of U.S.
M1 decreased most quarters and fell by more than forty-five per cent? Does this indicate that expansionary fiscal
policy (that is, federal deficit spending) has been effective in getting U.S.
dollars to trade more frequently (on an annualized basis) in GDP transactions? Is slower M1 money supply growth a factor?
I think that I saw data on CNBC this afternoon
suggesting that the yield curve or the yield gap based on the difference
between the two-year and the ten-year interest rate on U.S. Treasury debt is
narrowing again. Will the period of faster
economic growth and increasing M1 velocity last?
(Please note that the data above are subject to
possible revision. Thus, the analysis
may change.)
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