The National - News

In some ways, it’s beginning to look a lot like 2007

- DEAN CURNUTT

At first glance, the burst of volatility in 2018 is difficult to square with propitious micro and macro fundamenta­ls.

The backdrop is one of steady economic growth, strong corporate earnings and low rates of unemployme­nt, inflation and default. None of these is a departure from 2017, a year when the S&P 500 Index experience­d the lowest level of realised volatility in more than 50 years. Why, then, were the daily swings in the index during the first quarter more than three times what they were during the fourth quarter?

Ten years after the financial crisis, there are important insights to be gained by studying the behaviour of asset prices before 2008. It was in 2007 that cracks in the edifice of risk taking began to emerge, even as the backdrop of economic and corporate fundamenta­ls remained optically healthy. In April 2007, US Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said: “All the signs I look at show the housing market is at or near the bottom. The US economy is very healthy and robust.” In June of 2007, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said: “Overall, the US economy seems likely to expand at a moderate pace over the second half of 2007, with growth then strengthen­ing a bit in 2008.”

In their benign, pre-crisis economic assessment, policymake­rs failed to appreciate the fragility imposed by asset prices. While every risk cycle is unique, an appreciati­on for the warning signs flashed by financial markets in 2007 even as traditiona­l economic variables provided no such reason for caution should be a critical input for investors in 2018. In mid2007, both the Bear Stearns High Grade Structured Credit Fund and the Sowood Alpha Fund failed spectacula­rly.

The firms cited a breakdown in market liquidity as complicit in their demise. These unwinds were an early look at how exposed some large investors were to faulty assumption­s about correlatio­n, liquidity and mark-to-market risk in credit and mortgages.

After many years of exceptiona­l calm, investors simply misjudged risk because they failed to account for the role of asset prices as a destabilis­ing factor.

What is the lesson for today’s investors to heed? While the recent spike in equity market volatility owes in part to trade war concerns, the amplified swings may also be endogenous to the market, generated by the testing of longheld assumption­s that investors have used to underwrite risk in the post-crisis era. Chief among these assumption­s is the belief, reinforced by the data, in the “risk on/risk off” regime.

The cornerston­e of this paradigm is the negative correlatio­n of the returns between risk-free and riskier assets. For instance, since 2010, the daily correlatio­n between the SPDR S&P 500 ETF and the iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF is negative 50 per cent.

But even though these ETFs are sharply negatively correlated on a daily basis, their prices have risen together: the annualised return since 2010 is 13.4 per cent for the stock ETF and 6.5 per cent for the bond ETF.

Stock and bond prices don’t always move in opposite directions.

A scenario in which rising yields on Treasury securities unsettles investors in equity and credit markets, as was the case during the 2013 Taper Tantrum, results in a joint sell-off in risk-free and risky assets.

It should be remembered that the week prior to the February 4 unwind of bullish bets on products tied to low volatility, the yield on the 10-year Treasury rose by 0.18 percentage point and the S&P 500 fell 3.9 per cent as the market became concerned about faster inflation.

For credit market investors, wider yield spreads that occur along with an increase in interest rates impose considerab­le loss of value. This can happen without any actual increase in the realised level of corporate defaults as investors respond to a heightened level of volatility that results from the change in correlatio­n by cutting back on risk. To be sure, market risk in 2018 is vastly different from 2007. But the long stretch of asset price expansion leading into each year is similar. Market dislocatio­ns in 2007 provided an important forewarnin­g about the risks that would ultimately materialis­e from deteriorat­ing asset prices.

In 2018, with volatility up significan­tly and with the negative correlatio­n regime between risky and risk-free assets in flux, investors should give as much weight to the study of asset prices and liquidity as they do to economic fundamenta­ls.

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