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Finance: What is the Difference Between Normal, Inverted and Flat Yield Curves, and What Do They Tell Us? 131 Views
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What is the difference between Normal, Inverse/Inverted, and Flat Yield curves and what do they tell us? Normal yield curves represent long-term interest rates being more favorable than short-term rates. Inverted curves represent the opposite, that short-term rates are more favorable. When this happens, usually something pretty drastic is happening in the market like a crash. If the yield curve is flat, rates are about the same. So, this flat period happens between normal and inverted, and is kind of a warning that a recession may be on the horizon.
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Transcript
- 00:00
Finance, a la Shmoop. [title page]
- 00:03
What's the difference between normal, inverted, and flat yield curves, and what to they tell
- 00:09
us?
- 00:10
All right, well let's start with the basics.
- 00:13
Yield curve... ooh, sexy term. [guy talks about yield curves]
Full Transcript
- 00:15
Say it a lot and people will think you know a lot about finance.... or that you're really [people are pretty impressed]
- 00:19
into slowing down while making gradual left turns. [pig thanks slow driver]
- 00:22
But in finance, a yield curve is just a graphic representation of bond yields, from "maturing [yield curves defined]
- 00:29
soon" to "not maturing for a really long time."
- 00:32
So here's a yield curve. [yield curve illustrated]
- 00:34
Note that the ticks on the bottom are time and, on the left--the vertical y-axis there--it's
- 00:39
percentage, or yield.
- 00:41
Well, this particular curve slopes oh-so-gently upward. [upward slope demonstrated]
- 00:44
You can see that bonds maturing in three months yield 2% and bonds maturing in 30 years yield
- 00:51
4.5%.
- 00:52
What does this say?
- 00:53
Well, it says that the debt markets believe that interest rates will be meaningfully higher [diagram explained]
- 00:58
in the future--like, more than double--and that, to some extent, there's risk in getting
- 01:02
those bonds paid off.
- 01:04
That is, money tangibly ready to be paid off in the next two months carries a lot less
- 01:08
investment risk than bonds three decades away. [roaches discuss bills]
- 01:11
Yeah, you never know, we could have this... [roaches watch nuclear destruction of world]
- 01:15
So this is a normal curve: Money near term yields less than money due far away.
- 01:19
Well, most of the time, this is how yield curves look.
- 01:22
But think about an era where the government is desperately fighting inflation and it raises [government fights inflation]
- 01:27
short-term borrowing rates massively. [rates increase]
- 01:30
Well this, in fact, happened in the 1970s when Vietnam's war economy, coupled with a [Vietnam War footage]
- 01:35
bunch of other elements, produced roaring inflation in the U.S.
- 01:38
So the Fed then raised short-term rates into the double digit zone, but most investors [rates increase]
- 01:44
believed that these very expensive short-term interest rates would stop people from borrowing
- 01:50
and buying stuff.
- 01:51
Think about your credit card charging you 25% a year in interest. [big credit card bill]
- 01:55
Ugh, that's a lot.
- 01:57
It'll make you think twice about putting that belly button ring set you saw at the mall
- 02:02
on your AmEx. [person doesn't buy belly button ring]
- 02:03
So when people stopped buying things on credit, well, they bought a lot less and the economy [tumbleweed in mall]
- 02:08
cooled, and then the Fed went ahead and lowered rates and the yield curve went back to normal. [rates decrease]
- 02:14
But for a while, the curve was inverted. [inverted curve demonstrated]
- 02:18
That is, is started with short-term rates very high, and then long-term rates were cheaper.
- 02:24
And as you might be able to guess, somewhere in the middle there, as the curves crossed
- 02:28
over, there was a short period where the yield curve was pretty flat. [flat yield curve demonstrated]
- 02:32
That is, the price of renting money is the same whether you're borrowing it for three
- 02:37
months or 30 years.
- 02:38
You know, that same 3.5% kind of rent.
- 02:40
Got it?
- 02:41
So now you've got curves, and you know how to use 'em. [pig admires curves]
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