Fed hikes give cash appeal; stocks no longer only game
in town
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[September 24, 2018]
By Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and April Joyner
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal
Reserve's anticipated interest rate hike this week will make cash the
most attractive it has been in about a decade and end the era of stocks
as the only game in town.
During this bull market which in August broke the record as the longest
ever, interest rates were so low that most fixed income assets other
than junk bonds yielded less than the inflation rate or the dividend
yield on the S&P 500. This drove yield-hungry investors to stocks, the
one asset that delivered a real rate of return, or return on investment
adjusted for inflation.
"One of the big influences in the market over the last decade has been
that bonds as an alternative have been pretty much out of the market,"
said Jack Ablin, chief investment officer at Cresset Wealth Advisors in
Chicago.
"There is historically a tug of war between stock investing and bond
investing and since the financial crises the bond market has been in the
tug of war with one arm tied behind its back," he said.
That may be set to change.

(For a graphic on 'S&P 500 dividend yield vs. 2-year Treasury yield'
click https://reut.rs/2zmDHNU)
The Fed ended its regime of rate suppression when it stopped expanding
its balance sheet and then began raising interest rates in late 2015.
Since then, bonds have slowly returned to delivering real returns
relative to inflation.
With next week's anticipated rate action, cash will join the party. A
broad array of money market assets should finally regain a real return
versus inflation. It will be the first time since early 2008 that money
market assets will deliver a real return.
"It certainly gives cash a boost. It gives risk aversion a boost," said
Ablin.
(For a graphic on 'Real U.S. Treasury yields since the Fed began raising
rates' click https://reut.rs/2zmV29s)
As the real rate of return available on safer U.S. assets rises, it
diminishes the appeal of riskier assets.
"The regime of safe asset shortages is over. We are now in a safe asset
glut regime," Credit Suisse Group AG analyst Zoltan Pozsar, said in a
recent note.
The stock market, meanwhile, is bracing for the rate hike at a time when
the forward price-to-earnings(P/E) of 17.2 versus the historic average
of 15. This was not a headwind three or five years ago when the
competition yielded a negative real return, but that valuation now may
look a bit pricey, especially with profit growth expected to moderate
after this year’s extraordinary, tax-cut induced showing.
[to top of second column] |

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in
New York, U.S., September 18, 2018. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid

S&P 500 earnings growth should hit its peak for the cycle this year, estimated
at 23.2 percent, while growth for 2019 is now estimated at just 10.2 percent,
according to Thomson Reuters data.
"As long as earnings growth outpaces the interest-rate rise, stocks should be
fine. If earnings growth slows in comparison to the interest-rate rise, then
you’ve got an issue," said Oliver Pursche, chief market strategist at Bruderman
Asset Management in New York.
Equity mutual funds posted outflows of more than $1 billion in the week ended
Sept. 19, marking the group's 13th consecutive week of net outflows, according
to Lipper data. At the same time, investors have been pouring money into
ultra-short obligation funds, in a sign of increased allure of investments with
shorter maturities.
The ultra-short obligation funds peer group, used to offset interest rate risk,
had net inflows of $614 million in the week ended Wednesday, the 28th straight
week of net inflows, Lipper data showed.
(For a graphic on 'Core PCE & the federal funds rate' click https://reut.rs/2PY8MNx)
Even as cash grows more attractive, analysts do not see stocks falling out of
favor soon.
"I think the euphoria around the economy and forward earnings growth is swamping
this yield comparison idea that bonds are starting to look more attractive than
stocks," said David Lafferty, chief market strategist at Natixis in Boston.

"I think investors will have real choices to make in the second half of next
year as (bond) yields become more attractive and the earnings outlook becomes
more fragile," he said.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed and April Joyner; Additional reporting by
Jennifer Ablan and Caroline Valetkevitch; Editing by David Gregorio)
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