Wednesday, July 23, 2025

The Fed's long reach: Influencing the 10-year Treasury

The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield serves as a linchpin for numerous borrowing rates across the economy, making it a crucial determinant of both consumer and business spending. Its influence extends to mortgage rates, corporate bond yields, and even the cost of auto loans. When the 10-year yield rises, it generally signals tighter financial conditions, leading to higher borrowing costs and potentially dampening investment and consumption. Conversely, a fall in this benchmark yield can ease financial constraints, encouraging borrowing and stimulating economic activity. This pervasive impact underscores the significance of the 10-year Treasury in shaping the overall economic landscape.

A commonly held belief within financial circles is that the Federal Reserve's monetary policy tools are primarily effective in controlling short-term interest rates, most notably the federal funds rate. The traditional view suggests that while the Fed can directly dictate the cost of overnight borrowing between banks, its influence over longer-term yields, like the 10-year Treasury, is largely indirect, mediated through market expectations of future short-term rates and inflation. This perspective often portrays the long end of the yield curve as being more subject to the ebb and flow of market sentiment and long-run economic forecasts, with the Fed's direct control seen as limited.



However, the Federal Reserve's response to the Global Financial Crisis provides a compelling historical example of its capacity to directly influence 10-year U.S. Treasury yields. In the years following the crisis, the Fed implemented multiple rounds of quantitative easing (QE), involving the large-scale purchase of long-term Treasury bonds and mortgage-backed securities. These actions directly increased demand for these assets, putting downward pressure on their yields, including the 10-year Treasury. For instance, during QE2 (November 2010 - June 2011), the Fed explicitly aimed to lower longer-term interest rates to support the economic recovery (see figure above). The subsequent decline in the 10-year Treasury yield during this period demonstrates the Fed's ability to actively shape the long end of the yield curve through targeted interventions. For a brief discussion on this, along with a few other related topics, please refer to the video linked below.

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