How High is Too High for Rising Government Bond Yields?

The two day rise in the gold price of more than US$50 fizzled out on Tuesday. The gold price is down about 7% (in US dollar terms) since its year-to-date high set on January 6. It is also down 13% from its all-time high set in August 2020. The silver price, boosted by social media attention, did not set its year-to-date high until February 1. Since then the silver price has slid about 5% from that high. Chairman Powell testified to Congress on Tuesday stating that the Fed plans to stay its course of keeping the Fed funds rate low. It is also continuing its asset purchase. This did little to inspire a further rise in the gold or silver price. But what about rising government bond yields?

Interpreting the Fed Chairman

The increase in inflation expectations, evidenced by the increase in longer dated US Treasury yields, caused scrutiny of Powell’s every word. Commentators searched for signs the Fed is changing its stance to one of tighter policy in order to ward off inflation taking hold. But Chair Powell stated in his prepared remarks that:

The economy is a long way from our employment and inflation goals, and it is likely to take some time for substantial further progress to be achieved.” 

We note one other passage in Chair Powell’s prepared remarks that is key to determining when the Fed might change its stance towards tighter policy:

“… Regarding our employment goal, we emphasize that maximum employment is a broad and inclusive goal. This change reflects our appreciation for the benefits of a strong labor market, particularly for low- and moderate-income communities. In addition, we state that our policy decisions will be informed by our “assessments of shortfalls of employment from its maximum level” rather than by “deviations from its maximum level.” This change means that we will not tighten monetary policy solely in response to a strong labor market. Regarding our price-stability goal, we state that we will seek to achieve inflation that averages 2 percent over time. This means that, following periods when inflation has been running below 2 percent, appropriate monetary policy will likely aim to achieve inflation moderately above 2 percent for some time …” (bolding added).

It’s Not About Inflation Anymore?

When Chair Powell’s testimony this week is combined with the minutes from the Fed’s January meeting (released last week), where ‘inflation’ was mentioned approximately 65 times but not in the context that inflation was worrisome or too high, the message we hear conveyed by the Fed is that it is not worried about inflation. In fact, the Fed wants higher inflation. The Fed’s ‘stable price’ mandate was put in place in 1977. However, the explicit 2% inflation target, as measured by the personal-consumption expenditures price index (an inflation gauge released by the US Commerce Department), has averaged only 1.3% since it was established in 2012.  

Rising Government Bond Yields

The question that now arises: How high is too high for rising government bond yields?

This question is especially relevant given the fact that government debt is at or near record high levels. Also many governments, including the US, are working on even more spending packages. These packages will are to both support household income levels and large infrastructure upgrades.

We believe the near-term higher inflation is likely to be ignored by central banks as ‘transitory’ or temporary as a result of the huge drop in 2020. If this ‘transitory’ inflation increases government bond yields beyond early 2020 levels then central banks are likely to implement some form of yield curve control to keep government borrowing costs low in a time of rising debt levels.

Watch Jim Rogers on the Latest Episode of GoldCore TV

Three examples of yield curve control that were discussed at the Fed’s June 9-10, 2020 meeting are:

  • During World War II, the Federal Reserve capped yields across the curve to keep Treasury borrowing costs low and stable
  • Since 2016, the Bank of Japan has targeted the 10-year yield to continue to provide accommodation while limiting the potential for an excessive flattening of the yield curve
  • Since March 2020, the Reserve Bank of Australia has targeted the three-year yield, a target that is intended to reinforce the bank’s forward guidance for its policy rate and to influence funding rates.

Yield Curve Control v. Quantitative Easing

Yield curve control is different from the current quantitative easing program. Under quantitative easing the Fed announces a set amount of Treasury purchases over a specified time frame. The Fed’s current quantitative easing policy is to purchase at least US$80 billion in Treasury securities per month. It will also purchase at least US$40 billion in agency mortgage‑backed securities per month. Under the current plan interest rates may accordingly still rise in response to market forces. Under yield curve control interest rates will not rise beyond the cap set by the Fed. This would leave the amount of Treasury purchases for the Fed open-ended. The Brookings Institution explains that:

under yield curve control (YCC), the Fed would target some longer-term rate and pledge to buy enough long-term bonds to keep the rate from rising above its target.

In other words, a yield curve control strategy extends the standard policy for targeting the federal funds rate to the 1, 3 & 5-year, and/or 10-year time-frame. Yield curve control is accordingly not a “new” strategy; the Fed is simply extending its interest rate caps, currently limited to only the federal funds rate, further out on the Treasury maturity spectrum.

The Key Advantages of Yield Curve Control

The advantage of yield curve control for governments is that inflation will rise faster than government borrowing costs. This gives governments even more room to increase spending, without having to worry about how to finance the increased spending. This also puts a cap on many any other forms of debt that are tied to government bond yields.

Speaking of rising government debt levels…

The Institute of International Finance updated Global Debt Monitor was released last week. It showed that governments added $12 trillion in government debt in 2020. It also showed that they are expected to add another $10 trillion this year.

Bottom line is that the Fed and other central banks are commitment to very accommodative monetary policy. This and the growing debt levels are long-term bullish factors for gold and silver prices.

Watch Louis Gave on the Latest Episode of GoldCore TV

NEWS and COMMENTARY

Powell says may take more than three years to hit Fed’s inflation goal 

Gold slips as strong U.S. Treasury yields dim appeal 

Treasuries Rout Accelerates as Quants Deepen Global Debt Selloff 

GOLD PRICES (USD, GBP & EUR – AM/ PM LBMA Fix)

24-02-2021 1807.25 1788.00 1277.36 1266.98 1487.19 1474.74
23-02-2021 1809.50 1799.65 1284.93 1278.65 1489.22 1481.83
22-02-2021 1798.80 1807.45 1282.54 1286.54 1484.01 1487.53
19-02-2021 1773.75 1786.20 1267.34 1274.28 1461.39 1473.26
18-02-2021 1782.80 1773.15 1280.59 1271.17 1477.76 1468.70
17-02-2021 1788.85 1780.70 1289.76 1285.84 1482.78 1479.05
16-02-2021 1823.45 1794.25 1309.78 1292.94 1499.61 1482.23
15-02-2021 1817.45 1817.30 1306.56 1307.18 1497.94 1498.73
12-02-2021 1818.00 1816.35 1318.05 1313.95 1501.49 1501.76
11-02-2021 1841.70 1840.10 1331.92 1331.68 1518.67 1516.06

Buy gold coins and bars and store them in the safest vaults in Zurich, Switzerland with GoldCore.

Learn why Switzerland remains a safe-haven jurisdiction for owning precious metals. Access Our Most Popular Guide, the Essential Guide to Storing Gold in Switzerland here

Receive Our Award Winning Market Updates In Your Inbox – Sign Up Here

Dave Russell

David is the CEO of GoldCore. Until Summer 2023 he was the Director of Marketing and Communications, responsible for all marketing and communications strategies and branding. David joined GoldCore in 2008 as Director of Business Development and later took over as Director of Marketing and Communications in 2020. Prior to this Dave managed and operated his own Marketing Agency and completed multiple coaching qualifications. "Working for GoldCore gives you a fantastic lens through which to view global financial and geopolitical developments. I am very proud to be part of a company that contributes to increasing investors understanding of these developments." When he’s not at work, David is passionate about sailing and has completed the ‘Round Ireland Yacht Race’ twice.

Also on news-goldcore-com

Videos

Expect $2,500 – $3,000 Gold In Next 12 Months

The 5 Major Trends That Are Shaping Our Economic Future

Patrick Karim on gold, inflation and the next break out

Blog posts

When The Weight of Inflation Becomes Too Much 

In a comment to MarketWatch last week we said that traders this week would be most focused on the CPI report that came out yesterday. In that very report, Inflation came in hot, above expectations, and posted its biggest monthly increase in August this year. It’s up 3.7% from a year ago. However, markets didn’t […]

READ MORE

Expect $2,500 – $3,000 Gold In Next 12 Months

It’s that time of the month again when we bring in a top chart analyst to take us through what they’re seeing in the markets, right now. This month we have the brilliant Gareth Soloway. Gareth explains why he’s watching the US Dollar, what he means by “Good news is bad news” and when we […]

READ MORE

Should We Worry About The Strong US Dollar?

Over the August period, it’s easy for people to switch off and to some extent, it might feel like the precious metals have been doing the very same! However, if you look at the YTD performance of gold across key currencies in the World Gold Council table provided below then you will take some heart […]

READ MORE

Featured

The King and Queen will be Gold and Silver

READ MORE
Newsletter
Category
Archives
Popular

No posts available

Videos

Expect $2,500 – $3,000 Gold In Next 12 Months

The 5 Major Trends That Are Shaping Our Economic Future

Patrick Karim on gold, inflation and the next break out

Blog posts

When The Weight of Inflation Becomes Too Much 

In a comment to MarketWatch last week we said that traders this week would be most focused on the CPI report that came out yesterday. In that very report, Inflation came in hot, above expectations, and posted its biggest monthly increase in August this year. It’s up 3.7% from a year ago. However, markets didn’t […]

READ MORE

Expect $2,500 – $3,000 Gold In Next 12 Months

It’s that time of the month again when we bring in a top chart analyst to take us through what they’re seeing in the markets, right now. This month we have the brilliant Gareth Soloway. Gareth explains why he’s watching the US Dollar, what he means by “Good news is bad news” and when we […]

READ MORE

Should We Worry About The Strong US Dollar?

Over the August period, it’s easy for people to switch off and to some extent, it might feel like the precious metals have been doing the very same! However, if you look at the YTD performance of gold across key currencies in the World Gold Council table provided below then you will take some heart […]

READ MORE

Featured

The King and Queen will be Gold and Silver

READ MORE