Personal Consumption Expenditures (Monthly Change) vs Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y)
Personal Consumption Expenditures (Monthly Change) is currently 0.4% (up +0.6%). Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) is currently 0.4pp (up +0.1pp).
| Metric | Personal Consumption Expenditures (Monthly Change) | Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) |
|---|---|---|
| Current value | 0.4% | 0.4pp |
| Previous reading | -0.2% | 0.26pp |
| Change | +0.6% | +0.1pp |
| Trend | up | up |
| Frequency | Monthly | Daily |
| Source | Bureau of Economic Analysis | Federal Reserve |
| Last updated | 2026-03-28 | 2026-04-04 |
| Category | consumer | rates |
What Personal Consumption Expenditures (Monthly Change) measures
Personal Consumption Expenditures measures the monthly change in household spending on goods and services. Consumer spending represents approximately 70% of U.S. GDP, making it the single largest driver of economic activity.
Consumer spending rebounded 0.4% in March after a rare decline in February, suggesting the consumer remains resilient despite falling confidence. For executives, the discrepancy between weak confidence surveys and solid spending data is a puzzle worth watching — consumers may be expressing anxiety while still spending. If spending follows confidence lower, it would be a significant drag on GDP growth.
What Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) measures
The yield curve spread measures the difference between the 10-year and 2-year Treasury yields. When positive (normal), longer-term bonds pay more. When negative (inverted), it historically signals recession risk.
The yield curve has un-inverted to +0.41 percentage points after being inverted for much of 2023-2024. Historically, the yield curve un-inverting and steepening often occurs just before a recession starts — the recession signal is not the inversion itself, but the re-steepening. For executives, this is a watch-closely moment: the economy may be entering a transition period.
Frequently asked
Personal Consumption Expenditures (Monthly Change) is currently 0.4%, up +0.6% from the previous reading. Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis, updated monthly.
Yield Curve Spread (10Y - 2Y) is currently 0.4pp, up +0.1pp from the previous reading. Source: Federal Reserve, updated daily.
Consumer spending rebounded 0.4% in March after a rare decline in February, suggesting the consumer remains resilient despite falling confidence. For executives, the discrepancy between weak confidenc The yield curve has un-inverted to +0.41 percentage points after being inverted for much of 2023-2024. Historically, the yield curve un-inverting and steepening often occurs just before a recession st