Fed Funds Rate vs 10Y Treasury Yield
The Fed funds effective rate stood at 3.63 percent in April 2026, with the FOMC target range at 3.50 to 3.75 percent after the December 2024 cut. The 10-year Treasury yield was 4.306 percent the same week, producing a positive 67 basis point fed funds-to-10Y spread.
Also known as: Federal Funds Rate (fed rate, interest rate) · 10Y Treasury Yield (10Y yield, 10 year treasury, TNX)
Why This Comparison Matters
The Fed funds effective rate stood at 3.63 percent in April 2026, with the FOMC target range at 3.50 to 3.75 percent after the December 2024 cut. The 10-year Treasury yield was 4.306 percent the same week, producing a positive 67 basis point fed funds-to-10Y spread. The pair captures the relationship between Fed policy (short end) and market expectations of future growth and inflation (long end). The 10Y minus fed funds spread inverted from October 2022 through October 2024 (24 months continuously inverted, the second-longest inversion in modern history). The curve un-inverted in October 2024 as Fed cuts began. Sustained positive spread suggests normal monetary policy regime; sustained inversion has historically preceded recession.
What Fed Funds and 10Y Capture
The fed funds rate is the overnight interbank lending rate that the FOMC targets. It represents the cost of funding for banks borrowing reserves and is the primary policy tool. The April 2026 effective rate is 3.63 percent, within the FOMC target range of 3.50 to 3.75 percent. The rate transmits through bank lending, money market funds, and short-term financing to broader financial conditions.
The 10-year Treasury yield is the rate the US government pays to borrow for 10 years. It is set by market trading rather than by the Fed (although Fed QE/QT programs influence it). The yield reflects three components: the expected path of fed funds over the next 10 years, the term premium (extra yield demanded for committing capital long-term), and supply-demand dynamics in the Treasury market. The April 2026 reading of 4.306 percent reflects expected fed funds path slightly above 3 percent over the next decade plus approximately 100 basis points of term premium plus some Treasury supply pressure.
The Term Premium Concept
Term premium is the extra yield investors demand for holding a 10-year bond rather than rolling 1-year bonds for 10 years. In efficient markets the two strategies should produce equivalent expected returns, but term premium reflects compensation for various risks: inflation surprises, real rate volatility, liquidity, and capital allocation alternatives.
Term premium has varied substantially over time. The 1980s saw term premium near 4 percent (high inflation uncertainty). The 2000s saw it decline to 1 to 2 percent (Great Moderation). The 2010s saw term premium turn negative briefly (zero-rate policy, ample QE demand for duration). The 2024 to 2026 period has seen term premium re-emerge to 80 to 120 basis points as Treasury supply pressure (large fiscal deficits), reduced central bank Treasury demand (post-QT), and inflation uncertainty all contributed. The April 2026 estimated term premium of approximately 100 basis points is normal by historical standards.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the current fed funds-10Y spread?+
The April 2026 fed funds-10Y spread is approximately plus 67 basis points (10Y at 4.306 percent minus effective fed funds at 3.63 percent). The spread re-emerged from inversion in October 2024 and has been positive ever since. The 30-year average spread is approximately 130 basis points; current 67 basis points is below average, indicating markets are not pricing strong forward growth expectations. The Iran war has expanded the spread modestly as long yields have risen more than short rates on inflation pass-through concerns.
Is the yield curve inverted now?+
No. The fed funds-10Y curve is currently positive at 67 basis points. The 2Y-10Y curve (a more commonly cited gauge) is also positive at approximately 50 basis points (10Y at 4.30 percent minus 2Y at 3.78 percent). Both measures un-inverted in October 2024 as Fed cuts began. The previous inversion lasted 24 continuous months from October 2022 through October 2024, the second-longest in modern history behind only the 1980 to 1982 Volcker era. Despite the historic length of the inversion, no formal US recession occurred during or shortly after.
Why did the 2022 to 2024 inversion not trigger recession?+
Three factors. First, the Fed cut aggressively, delivering 100 basis points of cuts in 4 months from September 2024 before broader economic damage accumulated. Second, fiscal policy remained expansionary; the federal deficit averaged 6 percent of GDP in 2023 to 2024, well above historical recession-cycle averages of 3 to 4 percent. Third, AI capex acceleration (approximately $500 billion annual hyperscaler spending) provided a private-sector growth driver. The combination maintained growth despite the inversion. The episode has been called "the curve's false signal," though the underlying mechanism (long inversions raise recession probability) remains intact.
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