Why yield curve upward sloping in recessions?

ext

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Hi everyone,
Hoping to get some help here :)
P81 of the Trading book (Reading 30 Monitoring and Rebalancing), it says (2nd paragraph) that yield curves tend to become steeply upward sloping during recessions, flatten in the course of expansions and are downward sloping before recessions.
Can someone please explain?
In another reading, it said that in a strong economic upswing, the yield curve is upward sloping (due to increased future loan demand it seems), meanwhile, here it says that upward sloping curve occurs during recessions.
Thanks a lot!
 
I haven’t got to that part, but my understanding is the contrary.
 
I think the question here is why they would be upward or downward sloping in either economic environment.
In the case of a recession, the supply and demand dynamics play a larger factor pressuring yields higher as a reflection of uncertainty through a higher risk premium on the long end. In a strong expansion, the upward curve is more a representation of inflation expectations.
 
Never mind ignore my post.
The OP is correct, however, I’d correct the statement to late stages instead of during and in the course.
 
When in a recession, interest rates on the shorter maturities end of the curve fall since central banks would cut short term interest rates to boost the economy. The assumption is that this rate cut is positive for the economy and will spur it up causing inflation over time and thus higher rates in the long term making the curve steep.
But if the yield curve is downward sloping, it indicates a possible recession in the future.
The egg and the chicken getting mixed up here!!
 
danv0330 wrote:
In a strong expansion, the upward curve is more a representation of inflation expectations.
I disgree. That woudl raise nominal rates to compensate for inflation = upward slope
 
Because the government’s monetary and fiscal policy will be expansionary in a recession.
Monetary = lower interest rates by central bank, pulling down front side of the curve.
Fiscal = more government spending. More government spending (in theory) leads to more inflation. More inflation leads to higher bond yields required. Back end of curve shifts up.
Low front end and high back end is a steeper curve.
 
Makes sense. I think if you answered it like that on the exam, you probably wouldn’t get any points though because none of that is in the cirriclum… like it says in a recession the curve is upward sloping because of increased maturity premium
 
ext wrote:
Makes sense. I think if you answered it like that on the exam, you probably wouldn’t get any points though because none of that is in the cirriclum… like it says in a recession the curve is upward sloping because of increased maturity premium
That’s stupid.
First of all, they will not ask you for a reason to explain why yield curves are upward sloping during recessions, but why yield curves may be upward sloping during recessions.
It’s not a rule, and anything is possible with a multitude of causes in economics.
 
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