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Posted by Craig Basinger on Jan 26th, 2026

Good vs. Bad Steepening

If an inverted yield curve is a harbinger of a near-term recession, then a steeper yield curve must be good news, right? Not so fast. Before unpacking that, let’s lay a bit of a foundation, just in case you don’t follow the shape of various yield curves very closely.

Yield curve basics in 100 words: The yield curve is a measurement of bond yields of various terms, from a few months to many years. Most often, the curve has a positive slope, meaning 10-year yields are higher than two-year yields. Locking your money up for longer should be rewarded with a higher yield (called a term premium). Sometimes the yield curve inverts, with short yields going higher than longer yields. This typically happens as short-term yields are more influenced by central bank overnight rates and longer yields by economic expectations. If the central bank is fighting inflation with higher rates and the economy starts to slow, it can invert.

The U.S. yield curve used to have a perfect record signalling recessions. If it inverted, there was a recession coming soon. Seven times this happened, and seven times a recession manifested. It even got the Covid one right, and that was one unique recession. But then it inverted in 2023, and there was no recession, marking its only false signal in 50 years. Seven out of eight ain’t bad.

U.S. Yield curve: 7 correct recession predictions and one false signal

So clearly, an inverted yield curve is bad, even with that one false signal. Normally, a steeper yield curve is good news, as it implies higher economic growth expectations (higher longer yields) and/or lower inflation risk (lower short yields). Most countries’ yield curves followed the U.S. in being inverted in 2023, steepened to become flat in 2024, and positively sloped in 2025. This was because inflation risk was falling and economic growth prospects were improving. Yay!!!

But steeper yield curves aren’t always good news. Japan’s longer yields moved significantly higher in recent weeks, accelerating a gradual trend that had been in place for a couple of years. The economic outlook for Japan has improved a bit, but not enough to justify that move in longer yields. Instead, yields moved higher on concerns over inflation and debt sustainability. Japan has been the outlier among central banks, consistently raising short-term interest rates to fight inflation while others are cutting. These higher yields increase the risk of servicing their debt, which is on the large size at 1.2 quadrillion yen or roughly 230% gross debt/GDP. This is bad steepening.

Japan's steepening yield curve is not good

An added wrinkle is that Japan, which has enjoyed very low yields for many years, is one of the popular borrowing jurisdictions for the carry trade, which borrows where yields are lower and invests elsewhere. These rising yields make borrowing more expensive for the carry trade, which has been mitigated by a weaker yen. At some point, though, these rising yields may cause some unwinding of carry trade positioning, which may hurt asset prices globally.

Yield Curve Steepening, Diversifiers, & Portfolio Construction

The other issue with steepening affects portfolio construction. If longer yields globally are rising because of fear of inflation or debt sustainability, as opposed to improving economic growth, bonds are not the portfolio stabilizer we all want them to be. Bonds still work really well as a portfolio diversifier if the market has an issue with slowing economic growth or rising recessionary risk. But if the market has an issue with inflation or debt sustainability, bonds probably won’t work well. This is one of the reasons equity/bond correlations have remained elevated over the past few years.

The correlation and beta between Canadian stocks and bonds have become historically high, muting diversification benefits

Final Thoughts

We do believe inflation and debt sustainability will continue to garner more attention as a risk going forward, and this will likely mute the defensiveness of bonds in a portfolio. This will require different kinds of defence, whether it be holding more cash, commodities, or different diversification strategies. Bonds remain core for protecting portfolios against potential economic growth slowdowns, but the need for a more diversified defence has not been greater in recent history.   

— Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments

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Sources: Charts are sourced to Bloomberg L.P.

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Craig Basinger, CFA

Craig Basinger is the Chief Market Strategist at Purpose Investments. With over 25 years of investment experience, Craig combines an educational foundation in economics & psychology with years of experience in both fundamental and quantitative research. A long-term student of the markets, Craig’s thoughts and insights can be seen in his Market Ethos publications and through his regular contributions on BNN.

Craig and his team bring a transparent and cost-efficient approach to investment management. The team provides asset allocation OCIO services and directly manages over $1 billion in assets. The team manages dividend mandates, quantitative risk reduction strategies and asset allocation services.