Displaying items by tag: bonds

Friday, 13 July 2018 10:08

A Big Financial Crisis May Be Coming

(New York)

One of the market’s favorite prognosticators has just called for a big financial crisis. Mark Mobius, 81, veteran investor, thinks that EMs are going to plunge, and that the normalization of interest rates and monetary policy will cause a crisis. “There’s no question we’ll see a financial crisis sooner or later because we must remember we’re coming off from a period of cheap money … There’s going to be a real squeeze for many of these companies that depended upon cheap money to keep on going”, says Mobius.


FINSUM: Emerging markets are currently having a rough time and the rise in rates is going to be turbulent, but calling for a Crisis seems a bit premature.

Published in Macro
Thursday, 12 July 2018 10:15

Morgan Stanley Calls Big Bust Coming

(New York)

Are you worried about an inverted yield curve and the arrival of a recession? Morgan Stanley thinks you should be, as the bank has just called for a big bust coming to markets and the economy. MS thinks the Fed will end its contraction of its balance sheet soon, which will be supportive for long-dated Treasuries. Accordingly, with short-term rates still rising, the yield curve will invert soon; by mid-2019 says the bank. Morgan Stanley recommends investors to be overweight US Treasuries and underweight corporate credit.


FINSUM: The spread between two-years and ten-years is only 27 bp right now. We think it will much less than a year before an inversion, especially given the hawkishness of the Fed coupled with the threat of a trade war.

Published in Macro
Thursday, 12 July 2018 10:13

A Great Time to Buy Muni Bonds

(New York)

Those who only pay causal attention to muni bonds might be scared away from the market by negative stories about big buildups in debt, bankruptcies, and a general erosion in credit quality. However, this year, nothing could be further from the truth. There has been a massive deleveraging of the sector in 2018, with total US muni bond issuance down a whopping 17% to-date, and on pace for 25% by the end of the year. The dearth of issuance has pushed yields down and prices up. “It’s a seller’s market”, says one muni bond analyst.


FINSUM: Part of the lack of new issuance is due to the federal tax changes, but nonetheless, the market is looking increasingly healthy.

Published in Bonds: Total Market
Thursday, 12 July 2018 10:12

Take Another Look at These Dividend Payers

(New York)

If there was one subset of stocks that looks deeply out of style right now, it has to be utilities. Back a few years ago, they were immensely hot as the stock market’s bond substitutes in an insanely low-yield era. Now, you can earn almost 2% on a short-term Treasury bond. However, it might be time to take another look at the sector. Most utilities are yielding about 3.3%, and have been supported over the last few weeks by the fact that bond yields have stopped rising. The sector’s stock prices have fallen just short of 10% since last September, but that means valuations look attractive, as do yields.


FINSUM: If you think yields won’t climb that much further—which we don’t, at least in the short to medium term—then utilities do seem like a good-yielding bargain.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Tuesday, 10 July 2018 09:58

The Bond Bear Market Has Begun

(New York)

Everyone knows it has not been a good year for bonds, especially Treasuries and long-dated bonds. However, did you know that it is July and the bond market is on pace for its worst annual performance in a century? (yes you read that correctly). Global bonds are on pace for an annualized loss of 3.5%. So the question is how can one keep money in the market, but not get hammered. The answer is high-grade, short-term bond funds. Floating rate corporate loans and high-yield municipals seem like good areas of focus. Remember that shorter duration bonds are less susceptible to interest rate risk, which makes them safer as the Fed raises rates.


FINSUM: These picks seem spot on to us. Higher-yielding, shorter duration, and floating rates all appear to be good selections for the current environment.

Published in Bonds: Total Market

Contact Us

Newsletter

Subscribe

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

Top
We use cookies to improve our website. By continuing to use this website, you are giving consent to cookies being used. More details…