KEY POINTS
  • The spread between the 2-year Treasury yield and that of the 10-year note climbed to its highest level since November 2018. The so-called yield curve is steepening.
  • "The Fed is on hold, the economy is doing well, and trade tensions aren't increasing. In such a world, a steeper curve follows intuitively," said Ian Lyngen, BMO's head of U.S. rates.
  • The benchmark 10-year yield has risen about 40 basis points since the beginning of October as investors fled safe-haven assets on easing trade tensions.
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange

The yield curve, which flashed the biggest recession signal in more than 10 years and sent shock waves through the financial markets just a few months ago, is now signaling things are just fine. In fact, it's saying things are more than just fine, it's pointing to a faster economy ahead.

The spread between the 2-year Treasury yield and that of the 10-year note climbed to 28.7 basis points on Wednesday, its highest level since November 2018. This move is called a steepening by financial pros and a reversal from the inversion (short-term rates rising above long-term yields) that triggered fears.