Afterall, ifyou'regivingupyourmoneyfor a longerperiodoftime, youexpecttobepaidmorefordoingso.
Butoverthepastcoupleofmonths, thetwo-yearand 10-yearTreasurynoteswappedplaces a fewtimes, withthetwo-yearnotebearing a higheryieldthanthe 10-year, whichisknownasaninversion.
Everysinglerecessioninthe U.S. economysinceWorldWarTwohasbeenprecededbyaninversionoftheyieldcurve
Althoughit's importanttonotethatnotallyieldinversionshavenecessarilybeenfollowedby a recession.
Nevertheless, inversionsdon't comeaboutunlessthere's someseriousconcernaboutthehealthofthe U.S. economy.
A secondconcernfortheeconomyisthecurrentcontractionin U.S. manufacturing.
TheInstituteforSupplyManagementreleasesitsPurchasingManagers' Indexeverymonth, whichis a gaugeforhowthemanufacturingsectorisdoinginthe U.S.
AndinSeptember, thePMIfellto 47.8%.
That's thelowestpercentageit's beensinceJune 2009, andanyreadingbelow 50 signals a contraction.
There's littledoubtthattheongoingtradewarbetweenthe U.S. andChinaisthebiggestheadwindinthisconfidencecollapseinmanufacturing.
PeterBoockvar, thechiefinvestmentofficeratBleakleyAdvisoryGroup, recentlysaidthatwehavenowtariffedourwayinto a manufacturingrecessioninthe U.S. andglobally.
The U.S. andChinahavebeentryingtoworkout a long-termtradedealformorethan a yearnow, withtariffsbeingimposedonandoffforthepast 15 months.
There's simplynoquickfixtothetradewar, andthelongeritlingers, themore U.S. manufacturingmaysuffer.
Lastly, historywouldsuggestthatthestockmarketand U.S. economyareprimedfor a recession.
Despitemorethan 10 yearsofexpansion, there's a goodprobabilitythat a recessionwillhappensoonerratherthanlater.
The U.S. hashad 14 recessionsoverthepast 90 years, oraboutoneeverysixand a halfyears.
Eventhoughthe U.S. economydoesn't sticktoaverages, thislong-termdataisprettyclearthatrecessionsare a naturalandunavoidablepartoftheeconomiccycle.