"Assessing the Reliability of Yield Curve as a Recession Indicator"

TL;DR Summary
The Federal Reserve Bank of New York's recession probability tool, which uses the spread between the 10-year Treasury bond and three-month Treasury bill yields, suggests a 61.47% likelihood of a recession by or before January 2025. While not infallible, this leading indicator has a strong track record, with every recession since World War II being preceded by a yield-curve inversion. If accurate, a recession in 2024 could lead to a significant stock market pullback, but historical data shows that economic downturns and stock market corrections are typically short-lived events, ultimately offering opportunities for patient investors.
- Is a Recession Imminent? The Fed's Leading Indicator, Which Hasn't Been Wrong Since 1966, Offers a Clear Answer. Yahoo Finance
- The *real* yield curve has just inverted Financial Times
- Recession prediction: Yield curve inventor says downturn to be mild Business Insider
- Why one of Wall Street’s most reliable recession indicators may have misfired MarketWatch
- Neel Kashkari Calls Yield Curve Recession Signal 'Not as Reliable' Barron's
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