10Y-2Y Yield Spread
Spread between 10-year and 2-year Treasury yields, classic recession signal when inverted.
The 10Y-2Y Yield Spread is currently 50 bps, last updated . Steep at 50bps, typical expansion/early recovery
Interest rates set the price of money and ripple through every asset class. An inverted yield curve has preceded every U.S. recession since the 1960s, making this the single most-watched corner of fixed income. Monitoring rate differentials, real yields, and forward expectations helps traders anticipate risk-on or risk-off regime shifts.
Current Reading
Steep at 50bps, typical expansion/early recovery
About 10Y-2Y Yield Spread
What Is the Yield Curve?
The yield curve plots the yields of US Treasury bonds across different maturities, from 1-month bills to 30-year bonds, at a single point in time. It is the most important chart in all of finance: its shape, slope, and movements drive trillions of dollars in asset allocation, determine the profitability of the banking system, predict recessions, and directly influence the cost of every mortgage, car loan, and corporate bond in America.
In a normal economic environment, the curve slopes upward: longer-dated bonds yield more than shorter-dated ones because investors demand compensation (the "term premium") for tying up money for longer and bearing the risk of future inflation or rate changes. When this relationship breaks down, when short rates exceed long rates, the curve inverts, and historically, recession follows.
The Key Curve Segments
| Segment | Calculation | What It Measures | Primary Users |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2s10s | 10Y yield − 2Y yield | Growth/recession expectations vs monetary policy | Macro traders, media, general indicator |
| 3m10s | 10Y yield − 3M yield | Current policy stance vs long-term expectations | NY Fed recession model, economists |
| 2s30s | 30Y yield − 2Y yield | Maximum term premium expression | Duration managers, pension funds |
| 5s30s | 30Y yield − 5Y yield | Long-end term premium specifically | Long-duration investors |
| Fed funds vs 2Y | 2Y yield − Fed funds rate | Near-term rate cut/hike expectations | Short-term rate traders |
The Front End (0-2 Years)
The front end of the curve is dominated by Fed policy expectations. The 2-year Treasury yield closely tracks where the market expects the average fed funds rate to be over the next two years. When the 2-year yield is significantly below the current fed funds rate, the market is pricing in rate cuts. When it's above, the market expects hikes.
The Belly (3-7 Years)
The belly of the curve is the battleground between monetary policy expectations and term premium. It's where the Fed's forward guidance has the most influence and where institutional demand (from banks, pension funds, insurance companies) is most concentrated.
The Long End (10-30 Years)
The long end is driven by growth expectations, inflation expectations, term premium, and fiscal concerns. The Fed has less direct influence here (except through QE). The long end is where "bond vigilantes" express displeasure with fiscal policy, if the market believes deficits are unsustainable, the long end sells off (yields rise) even if the Fed is cutting short rates.
The Four Curve Shapes and Their Implications
1. Normal (Positive Slope): 2s10s +50 to +200 bps
A healthy, upward-sloping curve indicates the economy is growing at a moderate pace, inflation is contained, and the banking system is profitable (borrow short at low rates, lend long at higher rates). This is the "default" shape that persists during most expansions.
Historical examples: 2004-2006 (pre-GFC expansion), 2017-2018 (post-tax-cut growth), mid-2021 (reopening optimism)
2. Flat: 2s10s around 0 bps
A flat curve signals uncertainty, the market cannot decide whether the economy will continue growing or slow down. It often occurs during the late stage of a Fed tightening cycle, as short rates rise to meet long rates. A flat curve is typically a transitional shape: it either steepens (if the economy reaccelerates) or inverts (if the Fed overtightens).
3. Inverted (Negative Slope): 2s10s below 0
Inversion is the yield curve's recession alarm. Every US recession since 1969 has been preceded by 2s10s inversion. The signal has one false positive (1998 inversion without recession, though LTCM and the Asian crisis caused significant stress) but zero false negatives, no recession has occurred without prior inversion.
Historical inversion record:
| Inversion Start | Maximum Depth | Recession Start | Lead Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| August 1978 | -242 bps | January 1980 | 17 months |
| September 1980 | -210 bps | July 1981 | 10 months |
| January 1989 | -18 bps | July 1990 | 18 months |
| February 2000 | -52 bps | March 2001 | 13 months |
| August 2006 | -19 bps | December 2007 | 16 months |
| March 2022 | -108 bps | TBD | 24+ months (as of 2025) |
The 2022-2024 inversion was exceptional: the deepest (-108 bps in July 2023) and longest-sustained since the Volcker era. As of early 2025, no official recession had been declared, leading to debate about whether "this time is different" due to unique factors (massive fiscal stimulus, immigration-driven labor supply, persistent consumer spending from pandemic savings).
4. Steepening (Bear or Bull)
Bear steepening: Long end sells off (yields rise) while front end is stable. Causes: inflation fears, fiscal concerns, reduced foreign demand, QT. The Q3 2023 term premium tantrum (10Y from 4.0% to 5.0%) was a classic bear steepener.
Bull steepening: Front end rallies (yields fall) while long end is stable. Causes: rate-cut expectations, flight to safety on the front end. This shape is historically the most dangerous for risk assets, it typically coincides with economic deterioration that forces the Fed to cut rates.
Why Inversion Causes Recessions: The Transmission Mechanism
Yield curve inversion is not just a signal, it is a cause of economic slowdown through several channels:
1. The Bank Profitability Channel
Banks perform "maturity transformation", they borrow short (deposits, overnight funding at the fed funds rate) and lend long (mortgages, business loans priced off longer-term rates). A positively sloped curve means this transformation is profitable; inversion means every new loan loses money. When the curve inverted in 2022-2023, bank net interest margins (NIMs) compressed significantly, contributing to the regional banking crisis (SVB, Signature, First Republic).
2. The Credit Tightening Channel
When banks lose money on new loans, they tighten lending standards, requiring higher credit scores, larger down payments, more collateral. This reduces credit availability for businesses and consumers, slowing investment and spending. The Fed's Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey (SLOOS) consistently shows tightening lending standards during and after curve inversions.
3. The Market Signal Channel
Because inversion has preceded every modern recession, the inversion itself changes behavior. CEOs delay investment decisions, consumers reduce big-ticket purchases, and financial markets price in higher risk, creating a partial self-fulfilling prophecy.
4. The Duration Mismatch Channel
Beyond banks, many financial institutions (insurance companies, pension funds) have assets and liabilities mismatched on duration. Sudden curve shape changes can create solvency issues, as dramatically demonstrated by the UK pension fund crisis in September 2022, where rapid gilt yield rises (bear steepening) triggered margin calls on leveraged LDI (Liability Driven Investment) strategies, forcing a Bank of England emergency intervention.
The Disinversion: The Most Dangerous Phase
After a prolonged inversion, the curve eventually re-steepens. Counterintuitively, this disinversion is often more dangerous than the inversion itself. Here's why:
The curve disinverts when the front end rallies (2-year yield drops) because the market is pricing in imminent rate cuts. Rate cuts happen because the economy is weakening. So the disinversion, which looks like the curve "healing", is actually the market saying: "The recession is arriving now, and the Fed is about to respond."
Historical pattern: The curve inverted well before each recession, then disinverted just before or during the recession's onset:
- 2006-2007: Inverted August 2006. Disinverted mid-2007. Recession started December 2007.
- 2000-2001: Inverted February 2000. Disinverted late 2000. Recession started March 2001.
- 2019-2020: Briefly inverted August 2019. Steepened into 2020. COVID recession started February 2020.
For traders, the disinversion is the signal to increase recession hedges, not to remove them.
Trading the Yield Curve
Steepener Trade (Betting Curve Will Steepen)
When to use: Late in hiking cycles when inversion is deep and recession risk is rising
Execution: Buy 2Y Treasuries (or long ZT futures) + sell 10Y Treasuries (or short ZN futures), DV01-neutral
Risk: Parallel shift (if all rates move the same direction, the trade is neutral). Carry is often negative (you pay to hold).
Best recent example: Entering a steepener in Q4 2023 when 2s10s was -40 bps; by Q4 2024 it had normalized to near 0 as rate-cut expectations built.
Flattener Trade (Betting Curve Will Flatten)
When to use: Early in hiking cycles when the Fed is expected to raise rates aggressively
Execution: Sell 2Y / Buy 10Y, DV01-neutral
Best recent example: Entering a flattener in early 2022 when 2s10s was +80 bps; by July 2023 it had reached -108 bps.
The Butterfly Trade
A more sophisticated curve trade that bets on the curvature (the "belly" relative to the wings). Example: Buy 2Y and 30Y, sell the 10Y (betting the belly cheapens). Butterfly trades are the domain of relative-value fixed-income hedge funds.
The Yield Curve and Equity Markets
The yield curve doesn't just predict recessions, it directly affects equity valuations and sector performance:
| Curve Regime | Equity Implication | Sector Winners | Sector Losers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Steepening (bull) | Late-cycle, recession approaching | Utilities, staples, healthcare | Financials, cyclicals |
| Steepening (bear) | Reflation, growth | Financials, energy, industrials | Long-duration growth, REITs |
| Flattening | Tightening cycle | Quality growth, cash-rich tech | Small-cap, leveraged companies |
| Deeply inverted | Recession warning | Cash, short-duration bonds | Banks, housing, cyclicals |
Financials are the most curve-sensitive equity sector. Bank stocks (KBE, KRE) track the 2s10s spread closely because the spread directly determines bank profitability. A steepening curve is the strongest fundamental catalyst for bank outperformance.
Global Yield Curves
The US curve is the most watched, but every major economy has its own yield curve with distinct dynamics:
- Japan: Nearly flat for decades due to BOJ yield curve control (YCC). The BOJ's December 2022 and July 2024 YCC adjustments caused global rate volatility.
- Germany (Bund curve): The euro area's risk-free benchmark. Inverted alongside the US in 2022-2023.
- UK (Gilt curve): The September 2022 "mini-budget" crisis caused extreme bear steepening as markets rejected the Truss government's fiscal plans, triggering a pension fund crisis.
- China: Controlled by PBOC policy; has been aggressively flattening as China cuts rates to combat deflation.
Cross-country curve spreads (e.g., US 10Y minus German 10Y) drive capital flows and currency movements, a widening US-Germany spread attracts capital to US Treasuries, strengthening the dollar.
Recent Data
| Date | Value | Change |
|---|---|---|
| Apr 14, 2026 | 50 bps | -3.85% |
| Apr 13, 2026 | 52 bps | +4.00% |
| Apr 10, 2026 | 50 bps | -1.96% |
| Apr 9, 2026 | 51 bps | +2.00% |
| Apr 8, 2026 | 50 bps | -3.85% |
| Apr 7, 2026 | 52 bps | +4.00% |
| Apr 6, 2026 | 50 bps | -1.96% |
| Apr 3, 2026 | 51 bps | -1.92% |
| Apr 2, 2026 | 52 bps | +0.00% |
| Apr 1, 2026 | 52 bps | — |
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Data sourced from FRED, CoinGecko, CBOE, CFTC, and EIA. Updated daily. This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.