Recession fears tied to Treasury yields are overblown, Canaccord’s Tony Dwyer suggests

Recession fears tied to Treasury yields are overblown, Canaccord’s Tony Dwyer suggests


Wall Street may be overestimating recession risks.

While investors focus on an unnerving inversion between the five-year and 30-year Treasury Note yields, Canaccord Genuity’s Tony Dwyer is concentrating on optimistic activity in another part of the bond market.

According to Dwyer, the three-month versus five-year yield shows a healthier picture of the U.S. economy because it steepened.

“It measures the difference between what a banker lending institution gets its money at, what they have to pay, versus what they charge or invested at,” the firm’s chief market strategist told CNBC’s “Fast Money” on Monday. “We don’t look for a recession because of that yield curve that’s driving the lending is still very positive.”

Dwyer acknowledges the overall bond market is reflecting economic challenges — but not enough to spark a recession.

“The fear is definitely there. Asia seems to be a mess with more lockdowns. Europe is heading toward a recession, if not in one because of the once in a generation ground war there,” he said. “The U.S. is being affected by higher rates. So, it certainly is slowing down.”

Dwyer expects the Federal Reserve to continue raising rates over the next few months.

“There’s no question inflation is high. Rates are going higher,” Dwyer said. “The Fed is in a box. No matter the slowdown, they’ve got to raise rates.”

He sees stocks as a hedge against inflation and plans to buy around weakness. Based on historical trends during similar backdrops, Dwyer believes the S&P 500 will be significantly higher this time next year.

But for now investors may want to brace themselves for wild market swings.

“We call it tumultuous”

“We call it tumultuous,” said Dwyer, who believes volatility is an opportunity.

He lists interest rate sensitive plays Big Tech and utilities as his best contrarian ideas. Dwyer predicts the slowing economy will provide some inflation relief in the year’s second half and put Fed rate hikes on pause.

“The market seems to be almost pricing in a recession trade because the areas that should do the best with higher rates have been lagging,” Dwyer said.

The S&P 500 closed at 4,575.52 on Monday and is off 4% so far this year.

Disclaimer



Source

Retail traders keep their hot streak going, buying Tuesday’s dip while Wall Street drove ‘Sell America’ trade
Finance

Retail traders keep their hot streak going, buying Tuesday’s dip while Wall Street drove ‘Sell America’ trade

Retail traders leaned on their 2025 playbook and bought the dip this week as market volatility surged. Stocks posted their worst day since October on Tuesday after President Trump threatened to take over Greenland and announced tariffs on eight European nations that opposed him. But the market rebounded on Wednesday after Trump announced a “framework” […]

Read More
Rieder odds rising for Fed chair after Trump calls BlackRock executive ‘very impressive’
Finance

Rieder odds rising for Fed chair after Trump calls BlackRock executive ‘very impressive’

Key Points BlackRock fixed income chief Rick Rieder’s star is rising as a potential Federal Reserve chair following flattering remarks Wednesday from President Donald Trump. Traders on the Kalshi predictions market raised the odds for Rieder getting the nomination to 33%, about double where they were at the beginning of the week. Source

Read More
Trump signals he has a favorite for Fed chair: ‘Down to maybe one, in my mind’
Finance

Trump signals he has a favorite for Fed chair: ‘Down to maybe one, in my mind’

Key Points President Donald Trump said Wednesday he is nearing the end of a search to replace Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell and hinted he has his candidate in mind. “I’d say we’re down to three, but we’re down to two. And I probably can tell you, we’re down to maybe one, in my mind,” […]

Read More