TVC:US10Y   US Government Bonds 10 YR Yield
📊The yield on 10-year US bonds has increased by 105% since February of this year. During this time, market participants have paid special attention to the level of 2.74%, that currently acts as the main support. The current trend towards the strengthening of the US dollar would continue to put pressure on the yield on US 10-year bonds and on the economy as a whole. The spread between 2-year and 10-year bonds adds more fuel to the fire. The yield on 2-year bonds is higher than on 10-year bonds:


This graph shows clear signs of a recession, which is no longer in doubt. All signs of the deepest crisis on the face.


☝️It is necessary to remember:

🔴 In a favorable economic situation, the yield curve has a convex shape, namely, short rates are lower than long ones, that reflects the positive economic expectations of the market❗️

🔴 Inversion - when short is higher than long - this is a signal of an impending recession, but this type usually does not last long❗️

🔴 A flat curve indicates that the market sees hopeless stagnation, which is what we are actually seeing now❗️

Technical analysis speaks more in favor of sales than longs: the right shoulder of the "head and shoulders" reversal pattern is being formed, the base of this model is just the same at the level of 2.74% mentioned earlier. The final moment in this "sell history" is the breaking of the Moving Average down, which indicates the beginning of at least a downward correction. Prospects for downward movement are at the level of 2.39%.

In any case, an alternative scenario assumes a pause in growth, but a downward correction is more likely, that may be less than the declared movement according to the main scenario.


--------------------------
Thanks for support, subscribe and share your ideas here👇
--------------------------

Disclaimer

The information and publications are not meant to be, and do not constitute, financial, investment, trading, or other types of advice or recommendations supplied or endorsed by TradingView. Read more in the Terms of Use.