Please consider Treasury Five-to-30 Spread Near Widest This Year on Debt Ceiling Concern
The spread between five- and 30-year Treasury yields was near the widest since November as U.S. officials struggled to reach agreement on how to raise the debt ceiling to avoid a default.Treasury spreads, oil prices, and food prices would likely make Bernanke's life miserable should he decide any time soon to embark on another round of Quantitative Easing.
Treasury 30-year yields climbed yesterday as President Barack Obama vowed to veto a Republican proposal to impose mandatory budget cuts.
Fitch Ratings reiterated its plan to reduce its U.S. rating in the event of a debt default.
Sadly, some economists calling for QE3 simply cannot see the obvious. Please see University of California Economist Bradford DeLong is Blind: "I Don�t See Any Argument Against QE3" for a discussion.
Yield Curve 2011-07-18
click on chart for sharper image
Not Just a Debt Ceiling Concern
The long end of the curve is acting sick. I do not believe this is merely a "debt ceiling" concern, but rather a "debt" concern.
Democrats and Republicans alike have refused to do much of anything but point fingers and throw stones at the other party.
Bernanke has not helped matters by butting into fiscal issues and by threatening QE3 if the economy worsens. For further discussion, please see Bernanke Interferes in Fiscal Policy Yet Again, This Time Hoping to Place the Blame on Congress Rather than the Fed
In 2010, the bond market and stock markets were both cooperative with Bernanke's actions. However, it is a huge mistake to believe that will always be the case.
At some point the bond market will revolt when Bernanke gets too cute, too many times. That revolt may be sooner than anyone thinks.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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