Cash can beat stocks in returns and happiness
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[January 10, 2019]
By Gail MarksJarvis
CHICAGO (Reuters) - How bad was 2018 for
investors? They pulled a record amount of money from stock and bond
funds late in 2018 and tucked it into safe havens such as CDs, money
market funds or U.S. Treasuries that mature in a year or less.
In better times, investors usually use bonds as a buffer when stocks
turn nasty, but last year stock and bond funds alike were losers. The
Standard & Poor’s 500 fell 4 percent for the year and the bond funds
tracked by Lipper, on average, dropped 1.7 percent. Meanwhile, the top
money market funds provided returns of more than 2.4 percent.
“The flight to safety was perplexing because this was not a 2008 market
meltdown, but I don’t think people are willing to wait anymore to see,”
said Tom Roseen, Lipper Head of Research.
Among the concerns gnawing at investors: uncertainty about interest rate
increases, the U.S. trade dispute with China and slowing global growth.
“This is the first time in years, that I have been looking at cash as a
viable asset class,” said Linda Erickson, a Greensboro, North Carolina
certified financial planner.
Every quarter last year she advised clients to sell 2 percent of their
stock portfolio and add the money to a money market fund. The goal was
to create a safe stash that would not suffer losses in bonds if interest
rates continued to rise. With some money market funds and savings
accounts yielding more than 2 percent, parking cash was far more
acceptable in 2018 over previous years where interest rates were closer
to zero for the same accounts.
When shopping for high-yield bank accounts beware of rules such as
minimum deposits or balance requirements and make sure your money is
FDIC insured.
Certificates of deposit may pay up to 2.7 percent now if you are willing
to tie up your money for a year, but in the current environment, there
is little need to commit money for long periods or to use brokers for
safe investments. People can buy 13-week Treasury bills paying about 2.4
percent through the federal government’s Treasury Direct program
(https://www.treasury
direct.gov/tdhome.htm).
Portland, Oregon certified financial planner Theodore Haley put about a
quarter of his clients’ bond portfolio allocations into money market
funds or ultra-short bond funds.
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A screen displays the
Dow Jones Industrial Average after the close of trading on the floor
of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S.,
December 28, 2018. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon
“I can get a return without risk,” he said, noting ultra-short bond funds – with
bonds that mature in a couple of years - are less likely to incur losses as
rates rise than funds that invest in five or 10-year government notes.
Haley will eventually reduce cash in portfolios when he sees risks subside, but
he is not sure when.
RISK VERSUS COMFORT
While holding some cash is wise amid so much uncertainty, Rick Rieder, BlackRock
chief investment officer of fixed income, noted that if rates are not rising and
the stock market falls, 10-year Treasury notes could instead play their usual
role in providing a buffer from stock losses.
If history is any indication, investors worried about bad times recover faster
if they stay the course in a typical diversified portfolio. At the worst point
in the bear market in March 2009, most analysts were predicting more trauma. But
the stock market soared over 350 percent between then and the end of 2018, and
investors who had about 60 percent in stocks and 40 percent in bonds recovered
from the 2008-09 losses in about three years after the scariest point in the
bear market.
Nevertheless, people often find it more comfortable to increase their cash
during uncertain times. Even when the markets are not going through major
gyrations, research shows cash has a powerful soothing effect on people.
Sonja Lyubomirsky, a happiness researcher and psychology professor at the
University of California Riverside, along with Joe Gladstone, of University
College London, surveyed British bank customers in 2016 and found that being
able to see cash sitting in accounts and easily accessible gave people a feeling
of comfort.
(Editing by Beth Pinsker and Steve Orlofsky)
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