Talks of renewed ‘reflation’ trade resurface
Fed stance is seen as a vote of confidence for the US economy
The Federal Reserve’s signal that it will soon unwind its bond-buying programme is bolstering the case in financial markets for the so-called reflation trade, which lifted Treasury yields and boosted shares of banks, energy firms and other economically sensitive companies in the early months of 2021.
The reflation trade stalled during the summer. But the central bank said this week it would likely begin pulling back on its $120 billion a month government bond purchasing programme as soon as November, while also signalling that it may raise interest rates in 2022, earlier than many expected.
Not all that bad
Though monetary tightening is frequently seen as a drag on stocks, some investors view the Feds stance as a vote of confidence for the US economy.
“Normally, a hawkish turn would be bad for risk-on assets, particularly equities ... the fact the Fed is putting this out there signals to the market that the economy is on pretty firm footing,” said Ralph Bassett, head of North American equities at Aberdeen Standard Investments.
The Russell 1000 Value index, where reflation-trade stocks are heavily represented, is up 0.9 per cent since the start of the quarter, well behind the 5.7 per cent gain in the Russell 1000 Growth index over the same time.
Market watchers have also kept a close eye on Treasury yields, which have risen since the Fed meeting as expectations of stronger growth and inflation worries drove some investors out of safe-haven government bonds.
The benchmark US 10-year yield recently stood at 1.45 per cent, near its highest level since the start of July. Higher yields on Treasuries make some stocks less attractive.
Outlook for yield
Analysts at UBS Global Wealth Management said the 10-year yield will rise to 1.8 per cent by year-end but do not believe such a move will disrupt equities. The pace of any rise would be key: the banks research showed that a threemonth change in nominal yields of between 50 and 100 basis points has been accompanied by a 5.7 per cent return in the MSCI US index since 1997.
Only a rise in real yields of more than 50 bps over three months would likely weigh on equity returns, particularly in emerging markets, the bank said in a report.