Risk Disclaimer
Views and opinions expressed by individual authors do not necessarily represent those of BMO Global Asset Management.
The value of investments and any income derived from them can go down as well as up as a result of market or currency movements and investors may not get back the original amount invested.
Is this really the beginning of end, and what does it mean for financial markets?
Rising bond yields have hit equity markets over the last week. We look ahead and ask whether this trend signals the end of the bull market.
There is also a lot going on with respect to the virus, vaccines and lockdowns, not to mention corporate earnings. We’ll discuss all these in more detail in our monthly webinar on Thursday – so don’t forget to register.
Regular readers of these updates will know that we’ve been optimistic about recovery in economic activity and corporate earnings – good news for equities – but also worried about fears of inflation that would push up bond yields – bad news for equities. Bond yields have certainly gone up but last week was different: real yields also rose. By over 20 basis points for 10-year TIPS – the US equivalent of our indexed-linked gilts. That’s a big move. Even as yields on conventional Treasuries rose strongly after the vaccine news broke last autumn, real yields stayed low, beyond minus 1% for 10-year maturities in the US. They have now broken through to -0.8%.
Low, indeed negative, real yields are a big support for risk assets. They also favour stocks that have their earnings in the distant future – growth stocks and gold. We could see these assets suffer if real yields continue to rise.
But when it comes to the more general question of whether rising yields threaten the broader market, we can be more positive. Remember that all this is happening because markets realise that the astonishing power of the vaccines means that the global economy can get back to something like normal during the course of this year. When yields rise because growth is getting better, that’s typically positive for risk assets. And economic policy is highly supportive. Be it central banks keeping official rates ultra low, quantitative easing or fiscal policy.
There are other positives too: inflows to equities are strong – this is the normal pattern at this stage of the economic recovery. That’s a lot of demand for equities. It’s not the upturn in yields that typically signals the end of a bull market in equities, rather the downturn in growth. And growth is heading up, which is a big positive. Corporate buybacks in the US have also been very strong, in line with the much stronger-than-expected earnings season – and of course, buybacks were suppressed last year by the pandemic. The outlook for profits is very positive indeed, in my opinion.
Risk Disclaimer
Views and opinions expressed by individual authors do not necessarily represent those of BMO Global Asset Management.
The value of investments and any income derived from them can go down as well as up as a result of market or currency movements and investors may not get back the original amount invested.
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In recent years, the UK has been structurally behind the curve, with its bias towards ‘old economy’ stocks leaving it arguably short on growth and technology.
Chief Economist, Steven Bell, takes a look at the prospects for the pandemic and highlights the differences for the US, UK and European economies.
The current US earnings season has seen many companies better expectations but does this bode well for share prices from here? We assess whether some investors are too bullish and argue the case for focusing on fundamentals and thinking long term.
Macro Update 8 February 2021
There is a long way to go in the fight against the virus, but as the lockdowns and vaccine roll-outs continue, there is the collective hope that we will see some move towards ‘normality’ as the year progresses.
After the brutal sell-off in the first quarter of 2020, equity markets embarked on a rally which was to confound even the most optimistic expectations.
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