KEY POINTS
  • Stocks rise about 15 percent on average in the 18 months following inversions, according to Credit Suisse.
  • The spread between the 3-month Treasury bill and the 10-year note went into negative territory on Friday, the first time since 2007.
  • The more widely watched part of the curve — the gap between yields on the 2-year and 10-year debt — falls to just 10 basis points, versus 60 basis points a year ago.
Traders signal offers in the Ten-Year Treasury Note Options pit at the Chicago Board of Trade.

The bond market is edging closer to signaling a recession, but don't panic yet. Stocks could have a lot more room to run even if the feared "yield curve" inverts, history shows.

The spread between the 3-month Treasury bill and the 10-year note went into negative territory on Friday, the first time since 2007. The more widely watched part of the curve — the gap between yields on the 2-year and 10-year debt — is getting closer to inversion as well, falling to just 10 basis points, versus 60 basis points a year ago. The yield curve has been a reliable recession indicator in the past.