Yield Curves that Invert in the Night

Of what do they often predict?

The question is, did the change in the yield curve warn you that a recession was coming, or does it increase the likelihood that the recession will happen?

Todd

a BORROW SMART MONEY CONCEPT
Yield Curves that Invert in the Night

What's an inverted yield curve and why should you care?

Imagine you have a lemonade stand, and you sell lemonade to your friends. Sometimes, your friends borrow money from you and promise to pay it back later with interest. This is important to you, as many get their allowances on Friday, but some get it monthly and need time to pay you back... They like to drink their lemonade weekly.

If they pay you back next week, it is 5% interest, but if they pay you back in the next month it is 10% interest. Normally, when you lend money for a longer time, you expect a little bit more money back as there is more risk and you have to wait longer to get your money back to be able to use it again to buy more sugar and lemons.

But sometimes, something strange happens: there is a freaky Friday financing storm, and you charge 10% interest on the money paid back next week and 5% interest on the money paid back at the end of the month.

That's what happens with an inverted yield curve. The interest you charge for lemonade drinkers creates some strange behaviors. The hard part is you don't know what those behaviors are going to be, BUT you do know your friends will pay you more next week and less at the end of the month. It takes you longer to get your money back, and if a few kids move away (or forget), then you don't get paid at all. So maybe you stop financing lemonade altogether due to losses (but then you have fewer customers)... in other words, all kinds of things start to happen, and the end result is you have to lay off your sister and you have less money to spend on candy... Your business ends up going through a recession... You make it because you have no debt and you can cut back on expenses, and maybe you raise your prices a little to help.

The question is, did the change in the yield curve warn you that a recession was coming, or does it increase the likelihood that the recession will happen?

This is one for the history books... how's it going to play out...

The last time we got this far out of sync, the market was corrected by the recession, which means less money to spend on lemonade, cars, houses, eating out, etc., but the shorter-term rates come down and the longer-term rates go back up, and the freaky Friday reverses itself once again. This is usually great news for mortgage lenders.

Of note, your lemonade stand had no debt, but the girl down the street borrowed money from a bank to build a fancy stand with big signs and electronic ice machines to scale; when she launched her note, it was at 3%. It's due now, and to refinance the stand, the new note is 12%. If she doesn't refinance, they'll take her stand. If she does refinance, her new debt is 4+ times higher than before, so she'll have to lay off her brother and raise prices. That means her brother has less money to spend, and her higher prices create more inflation for other kids who want to buy lemonade.

There's a compounding impact...

Todd
Mortgage Advisor Tip: The longer the curve stays inverted the more damage that is going on behind the scenes. Big lemonade stands with a lot of debt on them (office buildings, banks, large commercial projects) are likely going to have to walk away, or raise prices, both options put strain on the markets.