Unusual Changes in the U.S. Treasury Security Market During the Fourth Round of Quantitative Easing
Published Online: Sep 05, 2023
Page range: 5 - 22
Received: Sep 09, 2022
Accepted: May 15, 2023
DOI: https://doi.org/10.2478/jcbtp-2023-0022
Keywords
© 2023 Kyle D. Allen et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
The Covid-19 Pandemic and policy response rattled the US Treasury markets. Conventional US Treasuries, inflation adjusted US Treasuries, and the relationship between the two developed in ways such that ignoring changes in real interest rates yielded distorted inflation expectations estimates. Since the beginning of the pandemic, monetary policy kept nominal rates low and close to zero, but positive. Real rates, on the other hand, became increasingly negative. The relationship between the two market rates became negatively correlated, and distorted because of the fourth round of quantitative easing, along with the Fed preventing nominal yields from turning negative. Federal Reserve actions during the Covid-19 pandemic drove a larger wedge between nominal interest rates and real interest rates in the inflation adjusted market.