The latest yield curve inversion is yet another warning in the bond market - an expert says it's one of 'four horsemen' predicting recession

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The latest yield curve inversion is yet another warning in the bond market - an expert says it's one of 'four horsemen' predicting recession

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AP/Richard Drew

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  • The five-year US Treasury note yield has been lower than the three-month Treasury bill yield since March 7, a key recessionary signal if it stays this way for a full quarter.
  • Its part of a model which sees four leading indicators of recession align, alongside weakening CFO confidence, increased market volatility, and greater protectionism.
  • Recessions are expected to occur every 58 months but it has been 118 since the last recession, increasing the likelihood of a downturn in the US economy.

The alarm in the bond market first rang in December, when the US three- and five-year Treasury yields "inverted" - a signal from credit markets than can often predict recessions.

Now, there's another alarm: The five-year US Treasury note yield has been lower than the three-month Treasury bill yield since March 7. If that persists for a quarter, it could spell trouble.

"This is a measure that empirically leads to other economic information," Campbell Harvey, professor of finance at Duke University's Fuqua School of Business, said in an interview with Business Insider.

The latest curve inversion is what Harvey calls one of "four horsemen" predicting potential recession. Here they are:

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  • Weakening CFO confidence
  • Increased market volatility
  • Higher anti-growth protectionism
  • A quarter-long inversion in the three-month and five-year Treasury yield curves

What's so worrying about a yield curve? A flat or negative yield curve suggests investors believe keeping your money in short-term bonds is more uncertain than bonds that pay off much later. If the long-term horizon looks riskier than the short-term one, it's a sign something's amiss in the economy.

The a key recessionary signal if it stays this way for a full quarter.

When the yield curve inverts - meaning short-term interest rates are higher than long-term rates for at least a full quarter - recession tends to occur within 12 to 18 months.

The same happened with three- and five-year spreads for the first time in 11 years in December. Concerns about global growth slowing and higher interest rates, coupled with simmering trade-war tensions, are thought to be behind the inversions.

The yield curve inverted between the two- and 10-year yield before the recessions of 1981, 1991, 2000, and 2008. It has preceded all nine US recessions since 1955.

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Another horseman is CFO confidence which indicates to greater recessionary fears according to the latest Duke-CFO survey. The study found that half of CFOs are planning on a recession at the end of 2019 or first part of 2020. 82% believe a recession will start by the end of 2020.

Read more: The probability of a US recession just spiked the most in 30 years - UBS says 'even we are surprised by this'

"CFOs are planning capital expenditure and other investments many quarters in advance and market uncertainty will impact their thinking," he said.

Growing anti-growth protectionism, in the form of the US-China trade war and Brexit, are other key markers as is increased market volatility over the past 12 months. The VIX, a leading market fear barometer, spiked in December but has subsequently declined in recent months.

Recessions are expected to occur every 58 months in the modern era, according to Harvey, but it has been 118 since the last recession increasing the likelihood of a downturn in the US economy. The yield curve inversion needs to stay in place until the end of June to indicate a recession will occur in the following nine to 18 months.

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