How Low are Bond Yields Really? (Bespoke)

With the recent rally in US Treasuries, a growing number of investors are calling the bond market a bubble.  The chart below shows the historical yield on the 10-year US Treasury going back over 50 years.  Besides the period in late 2008 and early 2009, yields on the 10-year are at their lowest levels ever.

While yields are at or near record levels on a nominal basis, what is the real yield that investors get after accounting for inflation?  To that end, the chart below shows the 10-year yield minus the y/y change in the CPI.  Using this method, the adjusted yield on the 10-year (1.62%) is still below its historical average of 2.66%, but nowhere near historical extremes.  While one could make the argument that Treasuries are unattractive due to increased supply and their low yields relative to other periods in the past, it is hard to argue that their current valuation fits the criteria for a bubble.

Copyright (c) 2010 Bespoke Investment Group

Total
0
Shares
Previous Article

Bespoke's Commodity Snapshot

Next Article

China and India: Those Two Big Outliers

Related Posts
Read More

Fear, greed and the myth of stock market highs

Markets are driven by fear and greed, with recent fears centered on the perceived perils of investing when markets have just reached an all-time high. Fundamental Equities Global CIO Tony DeSpirito suggests this concern may be overblown, with historical patterns showing that investing at market highs has had little to no impact on longer-run performance outcomes.
Subscribe to AdvisorAnalyst.com notifications
Watch. Listen. Read. Raise your average.