Junk bonds suggest U.S. stocks may have further to run
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[April 04, 2019]
By Kate Duguid and April Joyner
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. stocks just
wrapped up their best quarter in nearly a decade, coming within a
stone's throw of a record high.
Junk bonds did them one better, regaining record levels and then some.
Given the long-running correlation between the two asset classes, that
could mean stocks will soon be back in record territory as well, keeping
alive a bull market run now stretching into its second decade.
"We think this cycle has a lot more time than (others) think," said
Krishna Memani, chief investment officer at Oppenheimer Funds. "It's not
ending in 2019 and it's not ending in 2020. It has a few more years to
go."
Both stocks and their closest associates in the bond market - the
high-yield debt issued by companies with less-than-stellar credit
ratings called junk bonds - have come charging back in the first months
of 2019 after taking a drubbing at the end of last year. The S&P 500 has
gained 15% this year, and the ICE Merrill Lynch U.S. high-yield index
has returned 7.6%.
The clearest catalyst for the turnaround is the change in posture from
the Federal Reserve, which has taken an open-ended hiatus from
interest-rate hikes and will soon stop letting bonds roll off its
balance sheet. The ensuing drop in yields on safe-havens like Treasuries
has been a tailwind for riskier assets.
While the two frequently move in lockstep, junk bonds have often taken
the lead in demarking major turning points or signaling that both
sectors may be heading into uncharted territory.
A decade ago, for instance, high-yield bonds began their rise from the
financial crisis more than two months before the S&P 500 and the Dow
Jones Industrial Average found their bottoms. More recently, in the big
corrections suffered by both markets in 2015-2016 and in early 2018,
junk bonds regained record levels weeks before stocks did.
In the current case, the high-yield index has been striking new tops
since early February. Meanwhile, the S&P, up 22% from its December low,
is about 2% short of last fall's record and the Russell 2000, the
benchmark for small-cap stocks, is around 10% below its high-water mark.
Graphic: Junk bond recovery signals more gains for stocks, click
https://tmsnrt.rs/2I9iMCJ
TOO GIDDY?
The drive higher in both markets is occurring against the most uncertain
economic backdrop in several years, a suddenly clouded horizon that
drove the Fed to cut short a three-year tightening cycle. Last month the
spread between 3-month Treasury bill yields and 10-year note yields
briefly inverted, commonly seen as a signal of an oncoming recession.
Of even greater importance for stocks and high-yield bonds, the outlook
for corporate profits - the fundamental driver in both markets - is
weakening. S&P companies' earnings may have fallen in the first quarter
for the first time since 2016, according to Refinitiv data, and
full-year 2019 profit growth is seen as less than half the pace of
2018's tax-cut fueled pace.
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Street signs for Broad
St. and Wall St. are seen outside of the New York Stock Exchange
(NYSE) in New York, U.S., March 7, 2019. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
In that context, some investors are skeptical that financial and economic
conditions will provide sustained support for a run-up in stocks.
"While the economic data is coming across as mixed, the market and investors are
willing to give it the benefit of the doubt," said Lale Topcuoglu, senior fund
manager at J O Hambro Capital Management Group in New York.
"Both (credit and equity) markets are getting onto this weird cycle where
they're pointing fingers at each other in the absence of any economic news."
Graphic: Junk bond credit spreads are narrowing again, click https://tmsnrt.rs/2CQ1V4s
OPTIMISM PERSISTS
Still, equity markets are flashing green, and market volatility, which rises
when investors are anxious, is not far off last fall's lows when stocks were
last at a record.
While such measures of equity investor sentiment do not yet fully reflect the
recovery in stocks, as confidence rises it could lift them further, said Charlie
Bobrinskoy, vice chairman at Ariel Investments in Chicago.
"I'm worried that the high-yield market is a bit overpriced," he said. "Having
said that, I'm still pretty confident about stock prices for the rest of the
year."
Credit spreads, or the amount paid to investors above Treasury yields to
compensate for holding riskier debt, are also cause for optimism.
Even when 3-month Treasury yields briefly overtook 10-year rates, junk bond
spreads remained relatively narrow. That also shows investors aren't overly
worried, said Keith Lerner, chief market strategist at SunTrust Advisory
Services in Atlanta.
With spreads continuing to tighten, keep an eye on financial stocks in
particular, said Jim Paulsen, chief investment strategist at the Leuthold Group
in Minneapolis. Spreads and the total return of the S&P 500 Financials index are
closely correlated, but financials have not yet fully recovered from December's
rout even as junk bonds have made new highs.
"There's some catch-up room in those stocks relative to what credit spreads are
already saying," he said.
(Reporting by Kate Duguid and April Joyner; Editing by Dan Burns and Phil
Berlowitz)
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