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The current inversion is greater than any other dating back to 1980. See why the inversion of 2- and 10-year Treasury yields is an ominous sign.
Wall Street’s famous fear gauge is sending worrying messages to US stock bulls, betraying growing anxiety in the volatility market over rising tensions in the Middle East and ongoing turbulence ...
The gap between the two-year and 30-year notes is the widest in 22 years. An inverted yield curve has historically often preceded a recession.
For the first time since the financial crisis, the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield fell below the two-year yield, a pricing anomaly known as a “yield curve inversion”.
Is a recession coming? A look at yield curve inversion and what it means for the economy. Learn about government bonds and economic indicators.