Inflation Fears Soften As Economic Uncertainty Halts Treasury Yield Surge

 | Jan 19, 2021 20:41

There has been some to-do among investors about the US 10-year breakeven rate—a market measure of inflation expectations—breaking above 2% and staying there for a few days. It has been accompanied by a rise in Treasury yields, which, contrary to historic performance, continued to surge despite numerous indications of a tough first half for the US economy.

But there seems to be little genuine worry that inflation is about to spin out of control. The annual Barron’s roundtable found few of the participants expressing any concern, at least for the coming year.

h2 Half Century of Low Inflation Ahead? 10-Y Yield To 1.5%?/h2

Among Federal Reserve policymakers, only super-hawk Esther George, president of the Kansas City regional bank, is warning that inflation could come roaring back once service workers return to work in the second half.

An emeritus economics professor at the London School of Economics, Meghnad Desai, is even predicting a half-century of low inflation, acknowledging that he is sticking his neck out with such a forecast.

Major economic changes have shifted the paradigm, in his view, as robots and artificial intelligence have effectively removed any wage-push for prices for the foreseeable future, at least in the west. Debt service as a percentage of GDP—a flow-to-flow measure he finds more meaningful than the standard debt-to-GDP ratio—is quite low despite the explosion in government borrowing.

Investors in US Treasuries are somewhat more cautious about inflation, and it was clearly one of the factors driving yields higher. More important, analysts say, was the prospect of another $1.9 trillion in fiscal stimulus under the new administration. Joseph Biden will be inaugurated as the 46th president of the United States this week and he has already announced his spending plans for overcoming the impact of COVID-19.