Utilities stocks trump other havens as virus fears
spread
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[February 03, 2020] By
Saqib Iqbal Ahmed
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. utilities stocks
have outperformed other traditional havens in recent days, as worries
over the spreading coronavirus epidemic sparked a rush to safety.
The S&P 500 Utilities <.SPLRCU> index is up about 3.2% since Jan. 21,
when the first case of coronavirus was reported in the United States.
The index has risen 6.6% this month, logging its best monthly gain since
2016 and beating every other sector in the S&P.
By comparison, gold rose 1.8% in that period, while the Japanese yen
notched a 1.6% gain, and the dollar edged lower. The ICE BofA US
Treasury Index <.MERG0Q0>, which tracks the performance of U.S.
dollar-denominated sovereign debt publicly issued by the U.S. government
in its domestic market, rose 2%.
"Not all safe-haven assets are created equal," said John Praveen,
portfolio manager for QMA, the quantitative equity and global
multi-asset solutions business of PGIM in Newark, New Jersey.
Comparatively high yields and expectations of steady earnings during
troubled times have made utilities a popular destination for nervous
investors.
With the economic toll of the coronavirus outbreak still unclear,
utilities have more recently attracted those seeking to reduce exposure
to riskier assets while still remaining in equities, which have outpaced
most other markets over the last decade.
"Markets are ... not expecting the end of the world," said Juha Seppala,
director of the macro asset allocation strategy team at UBS Asset
Management. "You want to be defensive, you want to reduce your risk, but
you don't want to be completely out of the market."
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The benchmark S&P 500 Index <.SPX> is down about 3% since Jan. 21 but
remains close to record highs earlier last month. Betting against stocks
has been a losing strategy during the more-than-decade-long bull market:
the S&P gained 29% last year despite a trade war between the United
States and China and worries over a slowdown in global growth.
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Utility linesmen work on power restoration in the aftermath of
Hurricane Michael at Port St. Joe, Florida, U.S. October 12, 2018.
REUTERS/Steve Nesius/File Photo
Analysts at Goldman Sachs said they expected a 0.4 percentage point hit
to U.S. annualized growth in the first quarter, followed by a rebound in
the second.
High yields in utilities stocks have been another draw for investors at
a time when Treasury yields are near historic lows. The S&P utilities
sector sports a dividend yield of nearly 3%, compared with 1.6% and 2.2%
for 10-year Treasuries and the S&P 500, respectively, according to
Refinitiv data.
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The dollar, which often rises during times of market stress, has
declined 0.3% since Jan. 21. Weaker-than-expected U.S. data on Friday -
the Chicago Purchasing Management Index fell to a lower-than-expected
42.9, the lowest since December 2015, as new orders tumbled and
producers forecast tepid activity in 2020 - sent the dollar index down
0.5% on Friday.
A drastic worsening of the virus outbreak could push Treasury yields
lower and further boost the appeal of utilities, some analysts believe.
"The yield differential between Treasuries and utilities will get even
wider so I would not necessarily think that, at least in this period,
utilities are going to underperform Treasuries," said Praveen of PGIM.
(Reporting by Saqib Iqbal Ahmed; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Lisa
Shumaker)
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