National Post

Are those haven assets safe anymore?

OVERPAYING FOR WHAT USED TO BE SAFER SECTORS BRINGS ITS OWN RISK

- Suzanne Woolley

Mi c hael Sonnenfeld­t doesn’t mince words: “There is no safety in safety,” the founder of Tiger 21, a network of “ultra- high- net- worth” investors, said. “All of the historical places you could get safe income from — dividend- paying stocks, bonds — they’ve all been bid up because of quantitati­ve easing to the point where it’s just trash.”

Assets i ncluding U. S. Treasury notes, high- quality dividend stocks and lowvolatil­ity mutual funds have all seen spooked investors rush into their supposedly safe embrace. Sonnenfeld­t and others argue that has transforme­d them.

“When you overpay for what used to be safe assets,” he said, “they now have a lot of risk in them.”

Whether they’re “trash” is debatable. But the concern that the prices of these assets may now be propped up more by fear than by economic fundamenta­ls is legitimate.

Here’s a look at how some “safe” assets that investors have raced into over the past year or so are holding up. For a backdrop, take a look at how the S&P 500 has performed since last August’s deep dive.

August’s turmoil was followed by more market mayhem in early 2016, and then Brexit struck. From Aug. 24, 2015, when the Dow plunged some 1,000 points before closing with a 588-point loss, the blue-chip index is up 16.9 per cent and the S& P 14.6 per cent. Even if you look at the indexes from before the big drop, say from July 31, 2015, to July 28 of this year, the Dow is up 4.3 per cent and the S&P 3.4 per cent.

DIVIDEND DARLINGS

Within t he S& P 500, l ow i nterest rates have made dividend stocks hotly sought- after for i ncome. Vanguard’s Dividend Growth Fund has almost doubled in size in three years, to US$ 30.6 billion, US$ 3 billion of which flowed in over the past six months. To protect the fund’s long- term returns, Vanguard announced on Aug. 27 it was closing VDIGX to new investors.

The fund has beaten 83 per cent of its peers in 2016, and 86 per cent over five years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It tracks the overall price performanc­e of the S& P 500 pretty closely. But it has a total return for the past 12 months of 7.2 per cent to the S&P’s 5.4 per cent.

The top three holdings in the dividend fund, making up 9.4 per cent of assets, are Microsoft Corp., Costco Wholesale Corp. and United Parcel Service Inc. The trio have had a good 12-month run. Microsoft has gained 20.4 per cent, Costco is up 14.5 per cent and UPS is up 6.2 per cent.

IN TREASURY NOTES WE TRUST

The 10- year U.S. Treasury note is seen as a haven in a world where negative interest rates on sovereign debt are becoming more common. Last August, the 10- year Treasury yielded 2.2 per cent. Since then, its popularity has driven its price up and sent its yield down to 1.5 per cent. The current dividend yield on the S&P 500? 2.1 per cent.

“Historical­ly people looked for debt to produce income, and for the equity market to produce gains,” said Tiger 21’s Sonnenfeld­t. “Now people look to the stock market for dividends and to the debt market for gains, because you won’t get any income there.”

That price may have farther to go. “If people get scared enough, they will rotate into Treasuries this time, too,” said Sam Stovall, U.S. equity strategist for S&P Global Market Intelligen­ce. And that wouldn’t be wise, he said.

He noted that on July 11 the S& P 500 reached break even after a drawn- out correction that whittled 14 per cent off its value from late May in 2015 to mid-February of 2016. The stock market tends to get a second wind when it gets to break even, he said, and no bull market that lasted longer than three years has posted a final-year advance of less than 15 per cent.

“We may see a good year eight, and maybe a year nine, in this bull market,” Stovall figures. “Bull markets don’t end when a lot of people are cautious. They end when everyone is fully invested and there is no money to propel it further.”

THE LURE OF LOW- VOL FUNDS

The promise of low- volatility funds is a return that is slightly lower than the broad stock market, in return for a smoother ride. Funds with low-volatility strategies have seen money flood in. The iShares Edge MSCI Min Vol USA fund, the biggest ETF of the group, is the king of the hill, with more than US$ 15 billion in assets, up from US$5 billion a year ago.

“Up until this year, lowvolatil­ity ETFs took in a steady clip of cash from true low- vol seekers,” said Eric Balchunas, exchange-traded-fund analyst for Bloomberg Intelligen­ce. “But when the ETFs began outperform­ing, more hot money started piling in.”

Balchunas is philosophi­cal about the melt-up. “Everyone knows performanc­e-chasing usually ends badly, but people do it anyway,” he said. “It’s part of human nature.”

PERFORMANC­E-CHASING USUALLY ENDS BADLY.

 ?? ERIC THAYER / BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Assets including U. S. Treasury notes, high- quality dividend stocks and low-volatility mutual funds have all seen spooked investors rush into their supposedly safe embrace.
ERIC THAYER / BLOOMBERG NEWS Assets including U. S. Treasury notes, high- quality dividend stocks and low-volatility mutual funds have all seen spooked investors rush into their supposedly safe embrace.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada