The first order of business in repairing the economy is reestablishing a stable rate of inflation, ideally a small dose just above zero. There’s inherent danger in targeting higher inflation, but it’s a necessary evil at the moment, and there are signs that the effort is working.
Exhibit A is the yield spread between the nominal and inflation-indexed 10-year Treasuries. The spread is considered the market’s inflation forecast. Although no one should confuse this outlook with perfection, it does reflect market sentiment to a degree and it’s also monitored by the folks at the Federal Reserve, among countless other statistics.
As our chart below shows, this spread continues to exhibit an upside bias, and in the current climate that’s encouraging. As of last night’s close, the Treasury market is forecasting a 1.3% inflation rate for the next 10 years—up from virtually zero late last year. Certainly the extreme lows of last November and December appear to be history, at least for the moment. That’s heartening because it suggests that the market’s modestly encouraged that deflation’s threat is passing.
Insuring that deflation doesn’t take root has and remains the priority for stabilizing the economy and laying the foundation for recovery, as we’ve been discussing in recent months, including here and here. The good news is that progress in this battle continues to accumulate, and the above chart is but one example.