News

What does a Yield Curve Inversion mean, and what might it indicate for the U.S. Economy? Let's take a look at the history of the connection between recession and Yield Curve Inversion to help us ...
Indeed, the inverted yield curve is an anomaly happening rarely, and is almost always followed by a recession. The chart below presents the history of the U.S. yield curve inversions, as provided ...
An inverted yield curve signals when short-term yields or interest rates fall at a slower rate than long-term yields. Discover examples from history and how this impacts the stock market.
This chart through 2014 shows 1998's, 2001's, 2004's, 2008's, and 2011's recessions in Japan all occurred without an inverted yield curve, even though Japan's former history also showed the yield ...
The yield curve inverted in March 2019 raising the prospects of recession according to historical models. Normally the U.S. yield curve for government debt is upward sloping.
Are the previous inversion patterns meaningful? Obviously, each business cycle is unique and how the yield curve inversions play out will be somewhat different.
Yield Curve Inversions--Past and Present The chart below shows the entire yield curve at different points in time over the past 20 years.
The financial market’s top recession warning, the inverted yield curve, looks ready to end its record stretch of flashing a warning signal. That could spell good news for stocks—unless an ...
The first chart below shows the historical curve of the U.S.’s 10 year Treasury yield less the 3 month Treasury yield. Since the 1950s an inverted curve (when the curve has fallen below zero ...
This week, I’m going to rehash some numbers on the stock market after yield curve inversions and after the persistence of a yield curve inversion. The chart below shows the difference between ...