Bonds And Shares Could Rally At The Same Time

 | Mar 22, 2019 12:40

Investment markets and key developments over the past week

  • While Eurozone shares fell slightly, other major share markets rose over the past week helped by Fed dovishness. From their December low US shares are now up 21%, global shares are up 18% and Australian shares are up 14%. The underperformance of Australian shares in the rebound since December reflects the fact that they didn’t fall as much in last year’s share market slump and because the growth slump locally has weighed more on earnings expectations for Australian shares. Meanwhile bond yields continued their trend down over the last week, commodity prices were mixed with oil and gold up but copper and iron ore down and the Australian dollar rose slightly against a flat US dollar.
  • How can shares rally and bond yields decline at the same time? Who is wrong? This is not unusual. The same occurred in 2016 with shares bottoming around February and bond yields not bottoming till around July/August. Its often referred to as being the “sweet spot” in the cycle where shares rebound from being undervalued and as investors start to anticipate stronger growth helped by easier central banks, but bonds are still responding to news of low inflation and expectations of lower interest rates for longer. This is exactly what we are seeing now. Bond yields may still have more downside but are likely to push up in the second half as global growth improves.
  • Fed even more dovish both on rates and quantitative tightening. As expected, the Fed left rates on hold at its March meeting and while it revised down its growth forecasts a little bit it remains upbeat on the outlook and sees inflation staying around target. Consistent with its dovish tilt in January and inflation around target, the Fed remains “patient” on rates, its dot plot of rate hike expectations has been cut to no hike this year (from two hikes seen in December) with just one hike remaining next year and it has signalled that it will start slowing its balance sheet reduction (or quantitative tightening) from May and end it in September. In essence the Fed sees growth around potential, inflation around target, unemployment around NAIRU and rates around neutral so there is less pressure to do anything. So for now the Fed remains far less threatening for markets, but as we saw after a similar dovish tilt back in 2016 a return to a slightly more hawkish stance is a risk for later this year if as we expect US growth picks up again against the backdrop of a still tight labour market.