What Rising Treasury Yields Mean for the Economy
Вставка
- Опубліковано 9 тра 2024
- 00:00 - Intro
02:29 - Yield Basics
04:30 - The Yield Curve
05:15 - Why Are Yields Rising Now?
09:19 - Why Higher Yields Might Hurt the Economy
12:45 - Concerns Around Banks
14:30 - Other Considerations
17:08 - Closing Thoughts
There was a lot of talk last week about the rising US Treasury yields - let's take some time to explain what exactly is going on.
This channel is for education purposes only and does not constitute financial advice - Richard is not responsible for investment actions taken by viewers. Please seek out a registered advisor if you require assistance (while Richard is a registered portfolio manager at WDS Investment Management, he does not provide advice through The Plain Bagel, which is not affiliated with his employer).
I think you are the only finance UA-camr that can make a video about treasury yields and still make it very entertaining. Great work
That might be the best compliment I've ever received, thank you!
@@ThePlainBagel You're a good teacher, Mr Bagel
exactly what he said, and understandable!! unbelievably appreciated!
I agree. It’s good to hear a UA-camr who actually just gives facts, and not personal opinions disguised as facts.. I always appreciate his videos.
same, subscribed
this channel that I watch for entertainment is getting dangerously close to sounding like my university corporate finance courses lol
I had to take a break from youtube when all my recommended videos were actual lectures 😩
@@Wealthwise_capitaloh c’mon, at least buy comment bots to have a fake conversation with each other like everyone else. This is just shameless
@@DominicGreene72😂😂😂😂 i usually don’t react to comments but you got me
@@Wealthwise_capitalget lost. Idiot.
@@Wealthwise_capital Worst bot ever.
I like hearing about sticking to my long term goals to weather the storm.
That effectively translates to “don’t have to actually do anything”, appealing to my lazy nature.
Underrated comment. Don't try to time the market, just have a good diversified the portfolio and keep adding your monthly savings to it. I'm mid 40s now, been 90% stock in the 20s and 30s, 75/25% stocks/bonds since turning 40 has been doing quite well, even up 10% for 2023 despite August & September pullback. Folks, just build a proper portfolio and adjust the mix annually to rebalance the mix. That's all there is to it for non professional investors.
just don't do anything crazy and save some cash for a rainy day
@@xiphoid2011yep, that's exactly what I do.
Sounds good but hard to digest when your TLT bond portfolio drops 50% with no light in sight.😂
Market down? It's on sale!
Market up? You made money!
Canadians explaining US markets to Americans, there’s something poetic about this.
Except that we are in no position to lecture anyone with Turdeau in the office.
Are there no American sources you can find? Maybe its a you problem
most US financial youtuber is just a shill, I prefer watching plain bagel lol
and I'm not even canadian or american
Richard is a Chartered Financial Analyst, who just happens to live in Ontario (Toronto, I think).
As an aspiring CPA, and CFE, I think he is one of the best sources of financial advice. That he is Canadian is a mere coincidence.
Canada doesn't have an economy, so what else is he going to talk about
I really appreciate you explaining these things in a way that makes sense
I like facts even if they're "boring" so thank you
This is an impressively clear and coherent explanation of Treasury dynamics.
Thanks Richard for another down-to-earth detailed explanation. I am a big fan of your work.
I'm really glad I can get the full view from The Plain Bagel before I've even heard the breathless predictions. I'm not interested in the average finance channel's perspective. You provide what few channels can!
Always content of the highest caliber. Thanks again.
Thank you so much for presenting us such quality videos with clear information. Keep it up! :)
Thanks for having the Basics section in there for those of us that are still learning! Really appreciate it
Second that!
This is an amazing explanation for everything going on right now. Congrats!!!
Thank you for this, as usual!
❤ from Malaysia!
Wow I never thought there’s a beautiful explanation of this out there. Keep up the good work man
Thank you i finally understand inverted yield curves now❤
Appreciate the analysis without sensationalising or trying to sell a narrative like many other finance channels.
Economists have successfully predicted 13 of the last 6 recessions
The key to predictions is to predict often.
I really appreciate and need the steady hand approach these videos provide. I’m new to the market and to receiving pay based on equity, so it can be panic inducing. These videos help keep it in perspective.
Superb job of keeping your enthusiasm under control. Kudos😅
Great videos! I just have one nitpick with phrasing: When you say there's a "selloff" or money being "pulled out" of a certain asset class, it implies that the stock or bond market inflate or deflate like a balloon, with money being the air "pumped in" or "pulled out". As you know, for every seller there is a buyer.
That jingle at 1:40 makes you seem like a financial superhero "Captain Compliance! Calming fears with sound financial strategy and unsensationalized market analysis." Your channel is awesome dude! I show it to everyone who is trying to understand the economy and markets. Keep up the great work 😄
Your narrative on such topics you assume to be "boring", is really what makes your videos interesting and informative to watch & stay till the end. Thanks as always Mr Bagel 👍🏻
Make it boring? Mission failed successfully!
Great video. Although there was nothing in here I didn't already know I thought you covered pretty much most of the points on the topic. I might add that sell offs could also be a rush to liquidity in consideration of a potential financial crisis. Cash is a position in itself.
One of the best videos I've ever watched explaining treasury bond yields! Kudos to you, you've made over 130k people better informed off of this.
thanks for getting rid of my confusion! you are appreciated
Awesome work. Thank you for making these videos
Very calm delivery. I look forward to coming back in a year to rewatch this to see if you or Peter Schiff was right.
Great content, great presentarion. High level. Thank you
Great video! Very informative Richard, thanks you.
Please take this as a positive Richard; when it comes to making real world economics boring and real you are the best !!
This is a great explanation .... thank you
This is not boring; this is essential for future survival-----Bill from Pennsylvania
Love me some plain bagel. I tell my friends about your channel.
I like your videos like this. I think i need to watch it like 10 more times to grasp everything though
Yay, now I know what to talk about in my business class
Great video and very rational and balanced viewpoint.
really informative! Thank you. Video request: How rapidly rising interest rates affect the housing market and the likelihood of of defaults. What default % could be absorbable and what % would "break" the housing market. Just a suggestion. Love the videos.
Excellent video. Really helped me to understand!!!
This channel, The Money Guys, 2 Cents, and Patrick Boyle are the best financial UA-camrs by far. Great content!~
Hi thanks for the content. I think a video on the recent treasury quarterly funding plan and how it thinks when it chooses to spread its debt and borrowing across maturities would really be helpful.
Another topic that viewers might find interesting is that are big banks hedged enough to weather unrealized losses after this bear steepening.
Thank you.
More than just a plain bagel. Thank you
Keep up the good work!
Would love a video on what the normalization of these interest rates may look like in the future.
If they normalize, it would probably look like they start to normalize, then continue to normalize, then looking back we'd see that they normalized.
@@Wealthwise_capital Would hope this is a joke, but it's not possible to tell anymore.
@@mastpg it’s not a joke, it’s a scam
Bug startups will become a thing of the past
@@DominicGreene72 That's why I was hoping it was a joke. Wealthwise Capital sounds like a joke name.
ty mr bagel
Great video! I want to see how all this unfolds in the next 2 years.
I get that the market may be a little freaking about the interest rates but, as I see it, we were all acclimated to very low interest rates. The rates right now are basically a norm. It increases innovation, gives everyone’s head a shake that a buy and throw away economy isn’t staying around. Maybe , just maybe , we all will have to make things that last and are fixable. If not, then we will just have to go without. It’s time we appreciate and respect what we covet and learn to make it last.
Very intensive discussion, thanks
A great summary of the current state of the bond market, the various inputs that go into it and the stakeholders that stand to gain/lose from this. I have done a lot of research on the historic equity market (S&P500) moves during yield curve inversion.
What was particularly interesting to me is that each and every uninversion of the 10-2y curve since 1978 (six times for their respective recessions) has signalled equity market weakness in the short term, with the average one year maximum drawdown (from the market peak) of about -22%, yet in two thirds of these cases, the market rebounded and posted average gains of ~8.5% in this timeframe.
The initial uninversions also signaled more medium term weakness, with a stock market bottom being found 6-24 months post uninversion and an average drawdown from initial uninversion to the bottom of ~25%.
I think risky asset prices have a fair way to increase yet, as indicated by the FED's stance on "higher for longer" and the hotter than expected labour conditions, but the uninversion will be a stark omen of things to come.
Very true, but would that not create a very long window where the yield curve is continually inverted? We may see some crazy high rates as a result…
Love this video. Very educational
Great video, thanks Richard!
Rising yields also signifies resource constraint in the economy. That is, the opportunity cost of government spending is higher. Unless you think the government spends money very efficiently, that means lower growth and productivity.
What are you even saying?
That's all else hold equal, but we all know that both low rates and the current high rates were largely artificial.
Literally my thoughts exactly@@Seth9809
@@samsonsoturian6013 what does this mean? Do you mean the rates were made in a lab instead of grown organically using non-chemical fertilizers? All rates are set somewhere by someone. They're all "artificial" through and through.
Great video Richard
Awesome educational video !
Thank you very much!
Your content is terrific
Really nice channel. I work the last years at ECB as an economist but this big picture was not so obvious to me - though it should be.
Scary how much I agree with your point of view. I am invested in Stocks, Munis and annuity. Managed by Merrill Lynch and BAC. So I worry.
Deleveraging cycles are painful, but usually also necessary to return to healthy growth in the real economy. Particularly in Canada, this process is long overdue imo
Time to crash these overvalued assets (stocks, housing)
Excellent video ❤
Amazing video Richard
Don't say "sorry, that'd my child"
That moment added such a human element to this otherwuse plain explanation of this bagel.
Thanks as usual for the level headed and data driven discussion. There's so much doomerism and rage farming these days, especially around economcs. Glad to have found your channel!
I wish you the best of luck on your kitchen remodeling!
Thanks Richard!
Always great content
Amazing content!
When bond yields rise company spending declines - think of the interest of the lender being their return on investment. The higher the yield the more money you take home. The decline in company spending will trigger the recession we’ve been hearing about - however debt is only half of the story. Companies gain revenues through sales of equity as well (stonks). Company assets = liabilities + equity. It’s impossible to predict what’ll happen but we can have a pretty good idea by gauging the signs.
Bring back the animations with bagels and all that! These videos are awesome but hard to stay on top of. Or even some subtitles
this is gold.
Decent video for an overt Canadian. 😉 That being said, I didn't notice any mention that much of US debt is short term and close to 1/4 of it ($7.6 TRILLION) will mature in the next 12 months.
9:40
I'd be interested in hearing more about the debate around that
As someone preparing for the CFA charter / student of Finance, your videos are super helpful to see the concepts play out IRL!
Thank you Bagel, super nice video!
I cannot believe I just found out about your channel!
Question Richard if I may ask, So it’s best to lock in now with high yielding bonds and follow the rate cut or rate hike? Love the Videos!!
Good to know, thanks
I really appreciate this breakdown unlike the chaos noise of some other videos I’ve seen where they just induces fear and are headline grabbers.
Interesting that you cited Morning Brew. Probably the first time I've seen that.
Would love a video on the hilarity of the anomolous 20yr yield compared to the 10yr and 30yr due to illiquidity and its history
LOVE the term "FinTwit"!
Bond price movements tend to follow a positive convexity curve, both side movements tend to benefit the investor, statistically.
Given the current outlook, including wars on multiple fronts with multiple countries teaming up against us, the depletion of the strategic oil reserve as well as our arsenals, the devaluation of our currency, the instabilities of our banking system, and the general societal degradation it's likely wise to take a more defensive posture rather than "riding it out long term".
Good job thx
14:00 Would have been nice to mention the new facility by the Fed (was it the fed?) where banks can get loans collateralized by treasuries at face value, not market rate.
Pretty much eliminates that pathway of bank collapse as a possibility.
Your treasuries might only be worth 20% of their face value if you sold them ... but if you can get a cheap loan for 100% of their value, you can defend pretty much any bank run that does not last literal years.
Nice vid! I'm wondering what your thoughts are surrounding the idea that "the bond market is the most sophisticated market," specifically the sentiment that these are top-dog players with tons of inside info? e.g. One could argue the bond market saw the shutdowns coming. Obviously some subjectivity there but I think it's important to clarify the viability of this idea when talking about the inverted yield curve; essentially, inverted yield curve equals the guys with the most inside info know something bad is coming. Any truth to this perception?
If the inversion were resolving because short term rates were declining, this would be a sign that market sentiment expects a recession and related cuts in the federal funds rate. What we are seeing instead is a growing realization that the economy is still running too hot to bring down inflation so long term yields are pricing in the reality that rates will be higher for longer.
Good explainer but I think you could’ve highlighted how unprecedented the current market action is. Rates have trended downwards for 30 years and are now rising faster than ever before. The risks are astronomical. We have to seriously consider the possibility the US government will not be able to fulfill its debt obligations without yield curve control, which could give inflation a second wind (see Japan).
So sometimes the invert yield curve is followed by a recession. But what is something else that has happened in the past after a yield inverse? the economy just picking up steam again?
Please make a video about global credit ratings around the world!
"... and to make it boring."
That's exactly why I signed up to this channel :D "Keep it simple & stupid." Some people and the media tend to blew things out of proportions, whereas in the world of finance and business, things aren't that extremely interesting or mind-blowing - complicated, can be, but never or rarely so dramatic as some people would like to see it.
PS: I think your kid had a very fair point there xD
Thanks!!!
Thanks
awesome video!
I think better way of explaining why fed bought bonds in 2020 is so that the market will have enough liquidity on the buy side where all holders wanted to sell and also avoid for a sharp price decrease that would be self reinforcing for more people wanting to sell and eventually capital markets will crash as value of these bonds will decrease significantly and economy would suffer as this will translate to losses for investors
Great vid
Save Festivus, no bagel!
Those "highly deflationary" bank crises seem to be backstopped with BTFD now, which is highly inflationary. RRP draining is upward pressure on rates as well. All this new financial engineering reminds me of the old.
Good explanation why does the 10 year affect the stock market?
Can you do a video about the US housing market? Love your content!
That's an amazing crash course in bonds in just 18 minutes.
Another important factor in the treasury market is the resolution of the debt ceiling issue. For many months the federal government funded itself through “extraordinary measures” like raiding federal employees’ pension funds. Now the victims of these gimmicks must be made whole, so the treasury is issuing a lot more debt than normal.
I had not heard of that thanks!