KEY POINTS
  • The fearsome inversion of the key 2-year and 10-year yields finally happened early Wednesday, sending markets reeling.
  • Historical analysis shows that stocks typically have another 18 months to rally after an inversion, then trouble hits.

The inversion of the yield curve has been a big worry on traders' minds all year, but historical analysis shows that stocks typically have another 18 months to rally before equity markets start to see signs of trouble.

Strategists first started publishing research on yield-curve data last summer, when a rise in short-term rates narrowed the spread between the 3-month bill rate and 10-year yield to levels not seen since the financial crisis. That part of the curve eventually inverted, but stocks continued to hit new highs.