BondsOnline NetworkBondsOnlineBondsOnline QuotesPreferredsOnlineYield and IncomeYield and Income

BondsOnline Fixed Income Investing              

Preferreds Online - Tools for Income Stock Investing: Preferred Stocks, Lists, Dividends, and Yield to Call Calculator

BondsOnline.com: instant access to and extensive coverage of over 3.5 million stocks, bonds, indexes and other securities covering major and emerging markets and exchanges across the globe.
Treasury Bonds Bond Yields Treasury Bonds Online Bond Search Research Bonds
 
Bond News
Bonds Online
Bonds Online
Bonds Online
Bonds Online
5/10/2013Market Performance

S&P Indices
Municipal Bonds
S&P National Bond Index 3.00% 0.02
S&P California Bond Index 2.96% 0.02
S&P New York Bond Index 3.13% 0.02
S&P National 0-5 Year Municipal Bond Index 0.70% 0.01
S&P/BGCantor US Treasury Bond 400.09 -0.87
More
Income Equities:
Preferred Stocks
S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index 848.03 -1.02
S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index (CAD) 636.26 5.15
S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index (TR) 1,701.05 -1.30
S&P U.S. Preferred Stock Index (TR) (CAD) 1,276.26 10.89
REITs
S&P REIT Index 174.07 -0.65
S&P REIT Index (TR) 425.30 -1.56
MLPs
S&P MLP Index 2,469.58 14.93
S&P MLP Index (TR) 5,428.50 32.82
See Data

Income Security Dividends

Security Amount Ex-Div Date
AESYY $0.28 IAD increased from 0.0303 to 0.2771   May 16
AQN PRA $0.28   Jun 12
BAM PFA $0.28   Jun 12
BAM PFB $0.26   Jun 12
BAM PFC $0.30 IAD decreased from 0.4119 to 0.3031   Jun 12
BAM PRG $0.24   Jul 11
BAM PRJ $0.34   Jun 12
From PreferredsOnline
Click Here for More Information

Bonds Online
Print this Page Print Version   Email this Page to a Friend Forward to a Friend     Share  

High-Yield Bonds Soar While Stocks Languish

Seeking Alpha - April 22, 2009

This chart revisits the subject of earlier posts. It compares the yield on junk bonds (inverted) to the S&P 500 Index. The two markets are highly correlated, as you see in the chart, and this is typical over longer periods as well. The interesting thing to note is that the market for high-yield (junk) bonds has improved significantly so far this year, while stocks have languished.

Newer readers probably missed seeing this post in mid-November. In it I described key features of the Great Depression (e.g., real GDP declined by 26.5% over four years, and the peak of rate of defaults on all corporate bonds reached 14% in 1936), and compared it to the assumptions implicit in the pricing of equities and corporate bonds at the time (e.g., 24% of all corporate bonds would default within 5 years, and GDP would decline by almost twice as much as it did in the 30s). In other posts I have commented on the strong deflation expectations that were built into TIPS, and how these were questionable given that monetary policy in this crisis has been massively stimulative, while monetary policy was massively contractionary in the 1930s. 

In short, in November our markets were priced for a future that would be much worse than the Great Depression. If the market was to be believed, then we were about to witness the end of the world as we know it. I thought that was pretty unreasonable, and so I thought that stocks and bonds were so incredibly cheap that it was hard to believe.

Now, six months later, the corporate bond market has repriced itself sharply higher (as yields and spreads have fallen), which means that the market has dramatically reassessed the likelihood of corporate defaults. This improvement was foreshadowed by a significant narrowing of swap spreads last year, another subject I have commented on many times, and it is supported by all the "green shoots" that we have seen in recent months which suggest that the economy is stabilizing. TIPS have also improved, as deflation expectations have receded. Equities, however, haven't improved at all on balance. What does this tell us?

A: The equity market is simply slow to catch on to the improving fundamentals.

B: Since the economy no longer looks to be in freefall, default rates are likely to be much lower than the market earlier feared, but the outlook for profits remains dismal, due to fears of higher tax burdens, increased government regulation, cap and trade, nationalization, etc.

C: Deflation risk has dropped significantly; this makes bond defaults much less likely, but does little to improve the outlook for profits.

D: All of the above.

I would choose D, for want of a better explanation. Regardless, we are still left with a puzzle. With so many things having improved, including corporate bond prices and TIPS prices, why aren't equities doing much better? Even if equities rallied another 30%, they would still reflect an economic outlook that could be described as no better than grim.

Bonds Online
Partner Market Place
Bond Maturity
Shop4Bonds * Interactive bond trading platform * Over 45,000 bonds * Buy and sell online * Live bond quotes * No sign-up fees * Trade Now - A service of J W Korth & Company - jwkorth.com | shop4bonds.com FINRA SIPC

Yield & Income Newsletter - If dividend income, low price volatility, and growth are important to you.... We don't just pick we survey the leading investment banks and brokerages for their best recommendations and strategies, and pass them along to you.
Bonds Online
Stuff to look at
Yield and Income Newsletter: A must have for income investors. subscribe NOW

S&P Commentary and Newsletters: S&P
Bonds Online
BondsOnline Advisor
Income Security Recommendation January 2013 Issue.

Keep up with monthly, in-depth coverage of fixed income market strategies, commentary, and insights as seen by our sources. Sign up for the free BondsOnline Advisor now!

Unsubscribe here [+]
Bonds Online
Bonds Online
Bonds Online