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Treasury Yield Curve: What the Spread Tells You Now

The Treasury yield curve is one of the most closely watched indicators in all of financial markets. It plots the yields on U.S. government bonds across different maturities — from short-term bills to 30-year bonds — and its shape reveals what the collective wisdom of bond investors expects about economic growth, inflation, and Federal Reserve policy. When the curve changes shape, it sends signals that stock, bond, and real estate markets all respond to. As of late February 2026, the Treasury yield curve has returned to a normal upward slope after spending more than two years in inversion — a historically rare condition where short-term rates exceeded long-term rates. The 2-Year Treasury yields 3.42%, the 10-Year stands at 4.02%, and the 30-Year pays 4.67%, producing a 10Y-2Y spread of roughly 60 basis points. This normalization has been driven by the Federal Reserve's rate-cutting cycle, which brought the fed funds rate down from 4.33% in August 2025 to 3.64% by January 2026. For investors in Treasuries and fixed-income securities broadly, understanding what the yield curve signals — and how to position around its shape — is essential. This guide explains the mechanics of the yield curve, what different shapes mean, where we stand today, and how to use this information to make better investment decisions. For foundational context, see our guides on [How Treasury Bonds Work](/treasury/how-treasury-bonds-work) and [How to Buy Treasury Bonds](/treasury/how-to-buy-treasury-bonds).

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Deep Dive: How Interest Rates Affect the Stock Market

Interest rates are the single most powerful lever in financial markets. When the Federal Reserve raises or lowers its benchmark rate, the effects ripple through every corner of the economy — from corporate borrowing costs and stock valuations to mortgage payments and consumer spending. Understanding this transmission mechanism is essential for any investor trying to make sense of market movements. The relationship between interest rates and stock prices is not always straightforward. While the textbook view suggests that lower rates boost stocks and higher rates suppress them, reality is far more nuanced. Sector-specific impacts, market expectations, and the speed of rate changes all play critical roles in determining how equities respond. With the Federal Reserve having cut its benchmark rate from 4.33% to 3.64% between September 2025 and January 2026 — a 69-basis-point easing cycle — and the S&P 500 trading near 6,910, the interplay between monetary policy and stock market performance has never been more relevant for investors.

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