The 2y yield at 3% is more important than the 10y yield at 3%...

Charting the LOG of the US 2y yield (blue line) compared to that of the US 10y yield (red line) here shows the heavy move up in the 2y compared to the 10y. This, in my opinion, is very important because a 2y yield at or above 3% will likely drive short-medium term market reaction.

Some of my thoughts on the 2y, 5y, and 10y points of the curve for context:

• The timing of a hike primarily drives the 2y yield (or 1y spot compounded by 1y1y) while the pace of hikes drives the 3y yield (2y spot compounded by 2y1y) and 5y yield (3y yield compounded by 3y1y and 4y1y).

• If you hike sooner then you don’t need such a fast pace of hiking (flatter 2y5y). Conversely, if you wait too long, then you have to increase the pace to catch up (steeper 2y5y)

• The 10 year yield is the ultimate benchmark for the bond market or anyone quoting or looking at rates. Key drivers such as inflation, wages, GDP and market risk on/off sentiment drive this part of the curve.

While we have certainly seen a decent back up in US 10y yields, looking at the trajectory of the US 2y is probably more important. Why? The short-end has immediate effects on borrowing and lending and when the 2y level is currently near 2.5% that has to be a cause for some concern for tighter financial conditions and more expensive credit.

Looking at the LOG trend-line for both the 2y and 10y, if the current momentum and pace continues, then the 2y yield should likely meet the 10y yield sometime towards fall of 2018 i.e. a flat 2s10s curve and a 2y yield above 3% - my point is the 10y above 3% won't be the risk-off indicator, the 2y above 3% will be.
Chart PatternsTrend AnalysisUS02YUS10Y

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