Inflation surprise offers Warsh only brief relief: McGeever
TLT•Bond market signals inflation risk remains
Meanwhile, the economy is still running hot, and energy prices are rising again, with U.S. crude CLc1 now 20% higher than a year ago. The year-on-year change briefly turned negative last month after a ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran was announced, but a resumption of hostilities has deflated that particular balloon.
Oil is directly excluded from core inflation, of course, but it has an indirect impact through second-round effects. Rising production and transportation costs typically pass through to higher food and core prices, while more expensive oil can also raise inflation expectations, indirectly lifting core prices.
Markets certainly don’t think the inflation mission is accomplished. While implied rates and short-dated yields fell on Tuesday, other signals from the bond market suggested investors think delaying rate hikes — or not tightening at all — might be a mistake.
The U.S. yield curve steepened as short-dated yields fell more sharply than their longer-dated counterparts, with the gap between 2-year US2YT=RR and 10-year US10YT=RR yields widening the most since May and the 2s/30s spread widening the most since March.




