Hypothesis that forward rates are unbiased predictors of future short-term rates, with no systematic term-premium distortion.
The unbiased expectations hypothesis (UEH) says that a forward rate should be an unbiased predictor of the future short-term rate that will prevail over the same period. In fixed income, it is one of the strongest versions of the expectations view of the yield curve.
UEH matters because it gives traders and economists a clear testable claim: if forward rates are unbiased forecasts, then the curve is already embedding the market’s best estimate of future short rates without a systematic premium distorting the signal.
That matters when analysts use forward rates to infer future policy expectations.
In a simple one-period-forward setting, the idea is:
Where:
f_{1,1} is the 1-year forward rate beginning one year from nowE(r_{2}) is the expected 1-year spot rate one year from now| Question | UEH answer | What breaks the link |
|---|---|---|
| What does a forward rate represent? | The market’s unbiased forecast of a future short rate | Time-varying term premium or risk premium |
| Why might the forward rate overstate future spot rates? | Under UEH it should not do so systematically | Positive term premium often creates an upward bias |
| Why do empirical tests matter? | Because this is a forecast claim, not just a curve description | Real markets often reject the strict version |
Assume the current 1-year yield is 4.00% and the curve implies a 1-year-forward-1-year rate of 4.90%. Under UEH, the market’s expected 1-year rate next year is also about 4.90%.
If the actual short rate next year repeatedly lands below the forward rate, analysts infer that forward rates carried a premium and were not unbiased forecasts after all.
Expectation Theory is the broad framework that connects long rates to expected short rates. UEH goes further by saying the forward rate itself is an unbiased forecast, not just an expectations-rich market price.
In practice, term premium and risk compensation often cause forward rates to differ systematically from later realized short rates. That is why traders treat forwards as market-implied rates, not guaranteed forecasts.