Wall Street Week Ahead: Fund rebalancing could help buoy stock rebound
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[March 28, 2020]
By Lewis Krauskopf
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Money managers
rebalancing their portfolios to boost equity exposure into the end of
the quarter may support the nascent stock rally that has followed the
steep coronavirus-fueled market drop.
With the S&P 500 having lost around a third of its value in the recent
selloff, investors may need to step up their equity purchases and sell
bonds in order to maintain allocation targets.
A portfolio that had stock allocations at 60% and bond allocations at
40% in mid-February may now be more evenly split between the two asset
classes, facilitating the need for some investors to shift exposure
toward stocks.
"Given the many trillions of dollars in assets that follow some sort of
multi-asset class approach, the coming rebalance could well be in the
range of a few hundred billion," Jurrien Timmer, director of global
macro in Fidelity's global asset allocation division, wrote in a note to
clients this week.
Funds can raise stock allocations in several ways, including selling
bonds to buy stocks, using the cash in their portfolios or putting fresh
money toward equities, said Leo Acheson, director of multi-asset ratings
at Morningstar.
From speaking with portfolio managers, Acheson said many have not been
waiting for quarter-end to make adjustments and instead are revisiting
their portfolios daily and adjusting the split between equities and
bonds to maintain their desired risk exposure.
"As managers rebalance and reallocate toward equities to get back toward
their strategic weights ... that would be a support for equities,” he
said.
U.S. stocks have bounced more than 17% from their lows this week
following unprecedented stimulus measures from the Federal Reserve and
U.S. Senate passage of a $2 trillion bill aimed at helping unemployed
workers and industries hurt by the coronavirus pandemic. Few believe the
volatility in markets has ended, as the outbreak's trajectory remains
uncertain and the economic fallout potentially massive.
Still, the Fed's pledge to buy billions of dollars worth of bonds,
including $75 billion in U.S. Treasury securities a day this week, may
be a boon to those looking to rebalance.
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Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) near
the close of trading in New York, U.S., March 12, 2020.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
"You are buying equities at significantly lower prices than they
were and you are selling bonds that are being artificially bid up by
the Federal Reserve," said Michael O'Rourke, chief market strategist
at JonesTrading in Stamford, Connecticut.
The flows generated by rebalancing appear to have a noticeable
impact on asset prices, especially when bond performance trounces
that of equities, as has occurred so far in March.
On average, the S&P 500 has climbed nearly 7% over the final five
days of a month in which bonds outperformed stocks by at least 10%
during the month’s first few weeks, according to Christopher Murphy,
co-head of derivatives strategy at Susquehanna Financial Group,
citing eight such previous occurrences in data back to 1990.
The iShares Core US Aggregate Bond ETF <AGG.P> has fallen just 1% so
far in March, against an 11% slide in the S&P 500 <.SPX>, as of
Thursday, though that performance gap narrowed this week.
Pensions, endowments and foundations - overseeing as much as $15
trillion in assets - are among those that often look to adjust their
portfolios around quarter end, said Steve Foresti, chief investment
officer at Wilshire Consulting.
"All else equal, these institutions are fairly significantly under
their target weight to equities, meaning they need to purchase to
get back to their target," Foresti said. "There is no question there
is some natural buying and selling around those rebalancing
activities."
(Reporting by Lewis Krauskopf; additional reporting by Ross Kerber
in Boston, April Joyner and Chuck Mikolajczak in New York and Karen
Pierog in Chicago; Editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Leslie Adler)
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