Trigger: slope_2s10s: -0.72 → -0.77 (-0.05)
The 10-year yield falls below the 2-year (2s10s2s10s — The gap between the 10-year and 2-year government bond yields. Positive = normal upward-sloping curve; negative ('inverted') = a classic late-cycle/recession warning. inverts).
Why: Normally longer bonds yield more; inversion means the market expects policy ratespolicy rate — The interest rate a central bank sets directly (e.g. the Fed funds rate, the ECB deposit rate, China's LPR). It anchors all other rates. to be lower in the future than now — i.e. it expects cuts, usually because growth is set to weaken.
Bank lending margins compress.
Why: Banks borrow short and lend long; when long rates sit below short rates, the spread they earn (net interest marginnet interest margin — The spread a bank earns between what it charges on loans and pays on deposits. Higher short rates / steeper curves tend to widen it.) is squeezed, discouraging lending.
Capital rotates toward defensives and durationduration — How sensitive an asset's price is to interest rates. 'Long-duration' assets (long bonds, fast-growing stocks whose profits are years away) move most when rates change. as the cycle turns.
Why: An inverted curve is a historically reliable late-cycle warning, so investors position ahead of a slowdown — favoring steady-demand defensives and long bonds that rally when cuts arrive.
Helps
long-duration bonds (as the turn approaches)defensivesquality
Hurts
banks (margin compression)cyclicalssmall-caps
Caveat: Inversion has long and variable lead times to any actual downturn; it's a regime warning, not a timing signal, and can persist for months while risk assets keep rising.
House-view hook — empty (textbook default; Stephen's view bakes in here).