Displaying items by tag: rates

Tuesday, 13 March 2018 10:11

Goldman Says Market Havens are Collapsing

(New York)

Market volatility is back in a big way. This has made investors nervous and has re-ignited interest in traditional safe havens such as bonds and gold. However, Goldman Sachs has just note put out a note saying those asset classes have evaporated as safe havens. “No safe havens -- and no assets or equity sectors -- have had a positive beta to the VIX recently, and few have had a positive beta to 10-year yields, leading to diversification desperation”, say Goldman Sachs strategists. Rates, which look to be heading higher, have been a major culprit in the decline of safe havens, as have changing strategies, such as at the Bank of Japan.


FINSUM: This is one of the main reasons the market might end up falling further than it otherwise would have. Since there is no easy place to put cash, the overall panic level may be higher in a situation of serious volatility.

Published in Macro
Tuesday, 13 March 2018 10:05

Why Gold is a Poor Inflation Hedge

(New York)

When you think of gold’s role in a portfolio, most would immediately say it is for hedging against inflation. However, new research shows that gold is only a good hedge for inflation over very long periods, such as decades or centuries. In normal time horizons, say one to five years, it is a very weak hedge, and equities have performed much better. Now this is not to say gold cannot be a good asset class in its own right, just that its traditional role should be rethought.


FINSUM: If gold is really a poor inflation hedge, then investors and their advisors need to think very carefully about how they conceptualize it within their portfolios.

Published in Macro
Monday, 12 March 2018 10:32

As Rates Rise, Stocks Look Less Appealing

(New York)

Aside from the general tensions over rising rates and what they mean for the economy, investors need to pay attention to another important consideration. That consideration is that with each basis point of increase, stocks are looking less attractive as the allure of dividends fades. While for years the view has been that “there is no alternative” to investing in equities because of weak bond yields, that perception is now fading as yields rise to a place where they start to offer acceptable returns. “Investors now have a viable alternative to cash with yields finally above inflation levels”, says the chief investment strategist at BlackRock.


FINSUM: It might not a recession, but the simple emergence of a viable alternative might be what ultimately unwinds this bull market.

Published in Eq: Large Cap
Friday, 09 March 2018 10:17

Mortgage Rates are a Big Threat to Housing

(New York)

While some see the housing market as being in the middle of a long push upward, some see a lot of risks on the horizon as rates rise. In particular, mortgage rates look set to move strongly higher as the Fed keeps hiking rates. 30-year mortgage rates just hit a four-year high and are already hurting refinancings. Not only will the rates hurt new buyers, but they also keep people from moving, which could create bottlenecks in the system. The rise in rates is also challenging because home prices have risen sharply.


FINSUM: So the big point which counteracts all this negativity is that Millennials are entering their home-buying years, so there is a large pool of demand to support prices. The higher end of the market may be where things are weakest.

Published in Eq: Total Market
Thursday, 08 March 2018 11:33

JP Morgan Says 40% Correction Looms

(New York)

Okay investors, hold on to your hats. A big name has just come down with a stern and gloomy warning for the markets. JP Morgan is saying that stocks may have a giant bear market. How big? Try a 40% correction, according to the bank’s co-president. Daniel Pinto, the bank’s co-president who oversees trading and investment banking, says that markets are bound for a big correction because of fears over rising interest rates and inflation. The bank thinks the market will see a two- to three-year downturn where prices will fall up to 40%.


FINSUM: This is a big correction that JP Morgan is calling for. We do think the market might go through a rough patch, but we don’t know if it is going to reach these kind of Financial Crisis era proportions.

Published in Eq: Large Cap

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