As the new year is upon us, investors are going to hear a lot about central bank policy and the future of interest rates. Wall Street, in particular, has had a dismal forecasting record, consistently over-estimating 10- year bond yields. What happens so often is that the forecasters do not adequately account for the current state of interest rates. Rather, forecasters express their wishes for the coming year without an appreciation of what lies behind the current level of rates. This blog looks at the relationship between current rates and expected rates and what we might deduce regarding where interest rates are heading in the coming year.
To begin, a comparison of central bank policy rate, e.g. Fed funds rate, with the 2yr note provides some clues as to what the market is expecting in the short run (Figure 1):
While central bankers can have direct impact on the very short-term market (less than 24 months out), they have virtually no control over long rates. Long rates are tied closely to: (1) expected inflation and (2) risk premiums.
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