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This classic recession signal has been flashing red, but Goldman Sachs is unfazed

Bull and bear market
Kameleon007/Getty Images
  • An inverted bond-yield curve is widely regarded as the sign of an oncoming recession.

  • The US Treasury curve has been inverted for quite a while now – but Goldman Sachs says things are different this time.

  • Jan Hatzius, Goldman's chief economist, said "overly pessimistic" economic forecasts have put more pressure on long-term rates than is justified.

For months, investors have been bracing for a US recession, thanks in part to relentless warnings from a market-based indicator with an impeccable track record – the bond yield curve.

It's a graph that plots interest-rate returns on debt securities across maturities – and its inversion, where short-term yields top long-dated ones, is widely regarded as the signal for oncoming economic contraction. Inverted bond-yield curves have successfully predicted every US recession in the past 60 years.

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But it's different this time, according to Goldman Sachs.

The US Treasury yield curve has remained inverted for a year now, fueling fervent predictions for a recession. But six months into 2023, the economy looks just fine, as evidenced by a resilient jobs market, rapidly cooling inflation and buoyant equities.

Breaking with consensus, Goldman Sachs chief economist Jan Hatzius said in a note Monday, per Bloomberg: "We don't share the widespread concern about yield curve inversion." The Wall Street bank has lowered its estimate for the probability of a US economic contraction from 25% to 20%.

Hatzius explained that the term premium (the payoff for holding long-term bonds) in the bond market had been much lower than its long-term average, so the yield curve inverted more readily than in the past – and didn't require investors to bet on steep interest-rate cuts for it to do so.

He also thinks that economic forecasts have become too pessimistic, putting excessive strain on long-term rates – creating a self-fulfilling prophecy.

"So the argument that the inverted curve validates the consensus forecast of a recession is circular, to say the least," he said in the note, according to Bloomberg.

Read the original article on Business Insider