Economic Reports Scorecard

The economic reports of the last two weeks have generally been a little firmer. The Chicago Fed National Activity index, Existing home sales, Durable Goods orders, Personal Income and Outlays, the ISM Manufacturing index and Construction spending all improved month to month. None of them were however, what one could classify as particularly strong but improvement must be noted especially when it is reflected in other market based indicators (more on that later). There was still a steady stream of negative manufacturing surveys and reports and New Home sales were a disappointment. Imports and exports continue to contract and the ISM Non-Manufacturing survey was weaker, although a bit better than expected.

The market based indicators we follow offer a bit of a mixed interpretation of the data. The yield curve continued to flatten and TIPS yields fell as well with the 5 year maturity trading at negative yields near the end of February and into early March. The nominal 10 Year Treasury yield actually ticked a bit higher in the last week on the heels of the better than expected economic data. This action has pushed inflation expectations slightly higher over the last week. So the Treasury markets are painting a picture of slightly lower real growth expectations with slightly higher inflation. Not exactly a combination that inspires much confidence in our policymakers.

Yield Curve Continues to Flatten

Real Yields – TIPS Yields – Are Falling Again

Nominal 10 Year Treasury Yield Firmed In The Last Week

Inflation Expectations Rose

While Treasuries offered a mixed picture, credit spreads were pretty clear. As the economic data and oil prices firmed credit spreads narrowed considerably. The only tranche that didn’t have a significant move was at the junkiest end of the curve. CCC spreads narrowed slightly but there is still considerable concern about lower rated bonds.

The longer term trend for spreads though is still wider despite the recent narrowing. A rally like this even as the economy approaches recession is not atypical. The lack of participation by the CCC bonds is probably a bit of a warning not to get too excited – defaults are still likely to rise in coming months.

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