What is yield curve inversion?
The unusual condition where short-term Treasury yields (typically 3-month or 2-year) exceed long-term yields (typically 10-year). One of the most reliable recession indicators in US data, preceding every recession since 1955 with a single false positive.
The yield curve plots Treasury yields by maturity. Normally it slopes up (longer maturities yield more). Inversion is when the curve slopes down: short-term Treasuries yield more than long-term. The pattern signals that bond investors expect future rate cuts (typically because the Fed will need to ease to address economic weakness). The 2y-10y inversion has preceded every US recession since 1955 with a typical lead time of 12-18 months. The single false positive (mid-1960s) makes it the highest-precision recession indicator in macro economics.
Why it predicts recessions
The yield curve aggregates the expectations of bond investors about future short rates. When the curve inverts, those investors collectively expect the Fed will cut rates substantially in the medium term - which historically happens because the economy weakens enough to require easing. The signal is not causal; inversion doesn't cause recessions. It surfaces the consensus expectation that one is coming.
How invest-like uses it
The 7-framework consensus screen is bottom-up and does not incorporate macroeconomic signals as inputs. The yield curve is more useful as context than as a portfolio-construction input: when the curve is inverted, the cohort tends to face a tougher 12-18 month equity environment, and forward returns may lag. The screen continues to surface attractive bottom-up names through any cycle; the macro context informs position sizing more than name selection.
Frequently asked questions
What is yield curve inversion?
Short-term Treasury yields exceed long-term yields, an unusual condition that historically precedes recessions.
How reliable is the signal?
The 2y-10y inversion has preceded every US recession since 1955 with one false positive (mid-1960s). Typical lead time is 12-18 months.
Does invest-like use macro inputs?
No - the 7-framework consensus is bottom-up and fundamentals-driven. Macro context informs position sizing and risk awareness, not name selection.
Related
- What is survivorship bias?
- Benchmarks - the multi-baseline context for the consensus screen.
Educational only. invest-like is not a registered investment adviser; nothing on this page constitutes personalised investment advice.