Wall
Street Week Ahead-Bond, Stock Investors Making Hay; Can Both Be
Right?
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[May 03, 2014]
By Rodrigo Campos
NEW YORK (Reuters) - With U.S. stocks
near record highs and Treasury bond yields near multi-month lows,
the disconnect between equity and debt investors has rarely been as
stark. Over the coming months, the economy is likely to show one of
the groups has bet wrong.
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The S&P 500 <.SPX> sits less than one percent below an all-time
high. After a wintry first quarter, stock investors are betting that
economic growth is picking up, as evidenced by stronger spending
figures and business demand. That's boosted the cyclical stocks
which react to rising demand, particularly energy shares.
"The data are suggesting this may be the year when we turn the
corner," said Quincy Krosby, market strategist at Prudential
Financial in Newark, New Jersey.
"If data continues to gain traction you're going to see investors
turn to more cyclical parts of the market. And I think that's
already started."
Bond investors are reacting to a different story. Yields on the
10-year note hit a five-month low on Friday and the 30-year note's
yield fell to its lowest since June after the April jobs report,
which showed strong growth in payrolls but no growth in earnings and
a decline in the labor force.
That data points to the conclusion that overall economic demand will
remain tepid and that inflation won't materialize as the Federal
Reserve continues to pull back on monetary stimulus, analysts said.
"Fixed income investors are slowly waking up to the reality that as
the Fed steps back from quantitative easing, there are no signs of
inflation," wrote Andrew Wilkinson, chief market analyst at
Interactive Brokers in Greenwich, Connecticut, in a note.
Bonds are also gaining as concern about the Ukraine-Russia crisis
heightens the safe-haven appeal of U.S. debt, while some corporate
pension funds are increasingly shifting to bonds as they seek to
match their holdings to the liabilities they are going to face.
Still, the rise in equity markets doesn't mean that investors are as
confident about growth stocks as they were in 2013. The strongest
sector in 2014 is utilities, which have gained 14 percent and are
generally associated with safety. Consumer discretionary shares such
as Amazon.com are down 4.2 percent, the worst-performing sector so
far this year.
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This may be changing. Data show that the latest internal rotation in
stocks has seen the energy sector take the lead, with a 4.2 percent
gain over the last month.
Capacity utilization, a measure of how much industrial power is
being put to work, rose last month to its highest in nearly six
years and is expected to have ticked higher in the April report,
while Fed data showed last week that commercial and industrial loans
grew at a steady pace in April.
This makes it entirely possible that the bond market - generally the
more sober-minded of the two markets - may have it wrong.
"We believe that the current pricing in the Treasury market has
insufficiently accounted for the potential for an explosion in GDP
growth," said Millan Mulraine, deputy head of U.S. research and
strategy at TD Securities USA in New York in a research note.
(Reporting by Rodrigo Campos; additional reporting by Jennifer Ablan
and Jonathan Spicer. Editing by David Gaffen and John Pickering)
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