What’s Currently The World’s Worst Asset Class Investment?

 | Oct 19, 2017 14:43

Originally published by BetaShares

Investing success is often not just about picking the right asset class or securities – but also avoiding the poor investments. In the current global economic environment, out of the world’s major asset classes, it’s hard to go past global bonds as having potentially the lowest likely return over the next year or so. Let me explain why…

h2 Global bonds yield are incredibly low/h2

The rally in risk markets since the global financial crisis has benefited from a major tailwind – extraordinary monetary stimulus from central bankers who, despite the recovery in global economic growth and employment, have remained resolutely accommodating so as to try and lift still unusually low rates of inflation.

As seen in the chart below, this has led to a decline in global bond yields – as represented by the prevailing yield on the Bloomberg Barclays (LON:BARC) Global Aggregate Bond Index – all through the post-crisis global equity rally so far. As it stands, the yield on the benchmark global bond index is now only around 1.6% p.a. In turn, this reflects very low bond yields around the world, with the yield on US, German and Japanese 10-year government bonds presently around 2.3%, 0.4% and 0% respectively.