The Morning Bell — February 26, 2026

Markets are caught in a strange dance right now — the yield curve says recession fears are fading, inflation expectations remain calm, yet defensive plays are winning and volatility is creeping higher. Meanwhile, commodities are telling their own story with natural gas collapsing 58% and oil inventories cratering, creating a backdrop where traditional signals aren’t lining up the way textbooks suggest they should.

Today’s Briefing


The Morning Bell

Bond Markets Send Mixed Signals as Fed Faces Fresh Pressure

Markets are waking up to a puzzle this morning: the yield curve is normalizing, inflation expectations are anchored, yet defensive sectors are crushing it and the VIX is sitting 13% above its 20-day average. That’s not the setup you’d expect six trad

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Fed Watch

Fed Holds Steady at 3.5% — But the Real Story Is What Comes Next

The Federal Reserve kept its target rate unchanged at 3.5% through February 25th, marking six straight days of stability at this level. While the headline reads like business as usual, this pause come

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Data Wire

Natural Gas Prices Crater 58% in Three Weeks as Winter Demand Breaks

Natural gas just delivered a masterclass in commodity volatility. The Henry Hub benchmark plunged 5.8% this week to $3.08 per million BTU — capping a dramatic 58% collapse from the $13.80 peak just th

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Data Wire

Oil Inventories Crater 67% in Single Week as Supply Disruption Bites

US crude oil stocks just posted their largest weekly drop on record, plunging 16.6 million barrels to just 8.3 million barrels — a staggering 67% decline that signals either a major supply disruption

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Data Wire

10-Year Treasury Yield Holds Steady Near Multi-Month Highs

The 10-year Treasury yield ticked up to 4.04% Monday, a marginal 0.01 percentage point rise that keeps the benchmark rate hovering near its highest levels since late 2023. After bouncing around 4.05-4

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Data Wire

Two-Year Yields Hit Pause as Markets Wrestle With Fed’s Next Move

The 2-year Treasury yield held steady at 3.43% yesterday, unchanged from Friday and sitting in a tight range that’s defined the past week. But this calm surface masks some serious cross-currents under

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Data Wire

US Debt Hits $38.8 Trillion as Borrowing Costs Create New Fiscal Reality

The US national debt crossed $38.8 trillion Monday, adding nearly $30 billion in a single day and climbing 7.1% over the past year. That daily increase alone equals the entire GDP of Estonia — and it’

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Fed Watch

Fed Funds Rate Locked at 3.64% — Market Shows No Urgency for Change

The effective federal funds rate has held steady at 3.64% for six straight trading days, showing the overnight lending market remains completely calm about Federal Reserve policy. With the actual rate

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Fed Watch

Yield Curve Flattens as Growth Questions Linger

The 10-year-2-year Treasury spread dipped to 0.6% yesterday from 0.61% — a tiny move that captures a much bigger tension. We’re nowhere near the inverted curve that historically signals recession, but

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Fed Watch

Bond Markets Think Inflation Is Still Yesterday’s Problem

The 10-year breakeven inflation rate ticked up to 2.28% yesterday from 2.26% — a tiny move that tells a bigger story. While markets obsess over every Fed meeting and inflation print, long-term inflati

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What to Watch Tomorrow

Keep your eyes on how bond markets react to any fresh economic data this week, particularly if we get more clarity on whether this commodity volatility represents real supply disruptions or just winter demand patterns normalizing. The disconnect between calm inflation expectations and elevated market stress needs a catalyst to resolve itself — and it usually comes from data that forces traders to pick a side.


ON1010 provides economic education for investors. Nothing in this email constitutes investment advice. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.

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