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  • Why the 60-40 portfolio is poised to make a comeback in 2024

    Why the 60-40 portfolio is poised to make a comeback in 2024

    Speculation that the 60-40 portfolio may have outlived its usefulness has been rife on Wall Street after two years of lackluster performance.

    But as the yield on the 10-year Treasury note
    BX:TMUBMUSD10Y
    hovers around 4%, some strategists say the case for allocating a healthy portion of one’s portfolio to bonds hasn’t been this compelling in a long time.

    And with the Federal Reserve penciling three interest-rate cuts next year, investors who seize the opportunity to buy more bonds at current levels could reap rewards for years to come, as waning inflation helps to normalize the relationship between stocks and bonds, restoring bonds’ status as a helpful portfolio hedge during tumultuous times, market strategists and portfolio managers told MarketWatch.

    Add to this is the notion that equity valuations are looking stretched after a stock-market rebound that took many on Wall Street by surprise, and the case for diversification grows even stronger, according to Michael Lebowitz, a portfolio manager at RIA Advisors, who told MarketWatch he has recently increased his allocation to bonds.

    “The biggest difference between 2024 and years past is you can earn 4% on a Treasury bond, which isn’t that far off from the projected return in U.S. stocks right now,” Lebowitz said. “We’re adding bonds to our portfolio because we think yields are going to continue to come down over the next three to six months.”

    See: Case for traditional 60-40 mix of stocks and bonds strengthens amid higher rates, according to Vanguard’s 2024 outlook

    Does 60-40 still make sense?

    Since modern portfolio theory was first developed in the early 1950s, the 60-40 portfolio has been a staple of financial advisers’ advice to their clients.

    The notion that investors should favor diversified portfolios of stocks and bonds is based on a simple principle: bonds’ steady cash flows and tendency to appreciate when stocks are sliding makes them a useful offset for short-term losses in an equity portfolio, helping to mitigate the risks for investors saving for retirement.

    However, market performance since the financial crisis has slowly undermined this notion. The bond-buying programs launched by the Fed and other central banks following the 2008 financial crisis caused bond prices to appreciate, while driving yields to rock-bottom levels, muting total returns relative to stocks.

    At the same time, the flood of easy money helped drive a decadelong equity bull market that began in 2009 and didn’t end until the advent of COVID-19 in early 2020, FactSet data show.

    More recently, bonds failed to offset losses in stocks in 2022. And in 2023, U.S. equity benchmarks such as the S&P 500
    SPX
    have still outperformed U.S. bond-market benchmarks, despite bonds offering their most attractive yields in years, according to Dow Jones Market Data.

    The Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Total Return Index
    AGG
    has returned 4.6% year-to-date, according to Dow Jones data, compared with a more than 25% return for the S&P 500 when dividends are included.

    But this could be about to change, according to analysts at Deutsche Bank. The team found that, going back decades, the relationship between stocks and bonds has tended to normalize once inflation has slowed to an annual rate of 3% based on the CPI Index.

    DEUTSCHE BANK

    The CPI Index for November had core inflation running at 4% year over year, a level it has been stuck at for the past several months. The Fed’s projections have inflation continuing to wane in 2024.

    Staff economists at the central bank expect the core PCE Price Index, which the Fed prefers to the CPI gauge, to slow to 2.4% by the end of next year. If that comes to pass, investors should see the inverse relationship between stocks and bonds return, according to Lebowitz and others.

    A window of opportunity

    The dismal performance of 60-40 portfolios over the past two years has inspired a wave of Wall Street think pieces questioning whether it still makes sense for contemporary investors.

    A team of academics led by Aizhan Anarkulova at Emory University in November presented findings showing that over a lifetime, investors would have reaped higher returns via a portfolio consisting of 100% exposure to stocks, split between foreign and domestic markets.

    But fixed-income strategists at Deutsche and Goldman Sachs Group, as well as others on Wall Street, say investors wouldn’t be well-served by excluding bonds from their portfolio, particularly with yields at current levels.

    Rob Haworth, senior investment strategy director at U.S. Bank’s wealth-management business, says investors now have an opportunity to lock in attractive returns for decades to come, ensuring that the bonds in their portfolios will, at the very least, deliver a steady stream of income that would reduce any losses in stocks or declines in bond prices.

    There is, however, one catch: with the Fed expected to cut interest rates, that window could quickly close.

    “The problem is, for investors in cash, the Fed’s just told you that is not going to last. I think that means it is time to start thinking about your long-term plan,” Haworth said.

    Read: Fed could be the Grinch who ‘stole’ cash earning 5%. What a Powell pivot means for investors.

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  • Blue Apron notches triple-digit percentage gain while Nike rallies after earnings beat and boosts Foot Locker stock

    Blue Apron notches triple-digit percentage gain while Nike rallies after earnings beat and boosts Foot Locker stock

    Here are the day’s biggest movers:

    Stock gainers:

    Blue Apron Holding Inc.’s stock
    APRN,
    +133.52%

    rocketed by 134% after food-delivery start-up Wonder said it would acquire the company for $13 a share or about $103 million, just a fraction of its $2 billion in 2017 when the company went public.

    Shares of Nike
    NKE,
    +5.96%

    rallied 7% as the apparel maker, which is also part of the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    reported better-than-expected earnings, news that also lifted shares of European rivals including Adidas
    ADS,
    +6.22%
    .

    Foot Locker
    FL,
    +2.71%
    ,
    which sells athletic apparel, saw its stock rise by 3%.

    Walgreens Boots Alliance Inc.‘s stock
    WBA,
    +6.39%

    rose 6.2% as a top gainer among the Nasdaq 100
    NDX
    as stocks reacted with gains to the latest inflation data.

    Stock decliners:

    Bionomics 
    BNOX,
    -11.87%
    ,
    whose shares jumped 242% on Thursday after reporting positive results from a mid-stage trial of a treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder, fell 8% in regular trade.

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  • Why a surging U.S. dollar is about to become a problem for stock-market bulls

    Why a surging U.S. dollar is about to become a problem for stock-market bulls

    Analysts are ringing alarm bells over a surge by the U.S. dollar, warning it may be set to serve as another “headwind” for U.S. stocks as they struggle through a losing September.

    “Since early August, the USD (U.S. dollar) has climbed above its average [second-quarter] level. That means that for corporates, the USD switched back from tailwind to headwind…and an increasing one” as investors close out the third quarter this week, said Andrew Greenebaum of Jefferies, in a Saturday note.

    A rapidly strengthening dollar is often seen as a problem for big, U.S. multinationals. A stronger dollar makes their goods more expensive to overseas buyers. And income earned overseas will be less valuable on their income statements.

    The U.S. dollar went on a tear in 2022 as Treasury yields surged in response to the Federal Reserve’s aggressive series of interest-rate hikes. The ICE U.S. Dollar Index
    DXY,
    a measure of the currency against a basket of six major rivals, hit a 20-year high last September, but then retreated sharply.

    The pullback, which saw the index drop from a high near 115 last fall to a low below 100 in July, was seen as a tailwind for stocks. The S&P 500
    SPX
    saw its bear-market bottom in October of last year, and built on its rally through the winter and spring. Since late July, stocks have suffered a pullback, with the large-cap benchmark down around 5.5% from its 2023 high set on July 31.

    “After creating a substantial headwind to profits for U.S. multinationals, it’s been a tailwind [year to date]. But that all changed roughly 10 weeks ago,” Greenebaum wrote.

    The DXY has ripped higher by around 4% in that short time frame, a move more than one standard deviation outside the norm, he noted. And that sort of move has tended have implications for both company fundamentals and asset allocation.


    Jefferies

    The chart above breaks out the average performance of key indexes, including the S&P 500, S&P 500 cyclicals, small-caps (RTY), the Nasdaq-100
    NDX
    and the MSCI All-World excluding U.S.

    Small-caps are typically expected to outperform during periods of dollar strength, since most of their revenues come from within the U.S. Cyclical stocks are expected to suffer.

    A rising dollar also tightens financial conditions, adding to other headwinds for stocks heading into the fourth quarter, said analysts at Morgan Stanley, in a Monday note (see chart below).


    Morgan Stanley Wealth Management

    “With the 10-year real rate at a 16-year high above 2.0%, the U.S. dollar is surging, producing meaningful headwinds for U.S. multinationals,” they wrote.

    “Oil is becoming a constraint as well, with West Texas Intermediate crude
    CL00,
    +0.01%

    up more than 30% from its spring trough. Together with indications that bank lending and credit availability are already shrinking, these factors suggest the liquidity backdrop may worsen,” they wrote.

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  • The S&P 500 is flashing a warning that U.S. stocks are likely headed lower after breaking below its 50-day moving average

    The S&P 500 is flashing a warning that U.S. stocks are likely headed lower after breaking below its 50-day moving average

    The S&P 500 on Tuesday closed below its 50-day moving average for the first time since March. It could portend more losses for the index, technical analysts said, suggesting that the summertime stock-market selloff isn’t over yet.

    After trending lower all session, the index SPX closed down 51.86 points, or 1.2%, to 4,437.86 on Tuesday, its lowest closing level since July 11, according to FactSet data.

    It…

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  • Nasdaq is making a big change to its most popular index. Here’s how it might impact your portfolio.

    Nasdaq is making a big change to its most popular index. Here’s how it might impact your portfolio.

    Big Tech has gotten too big for Nasdaq’s liking.

    So the exchange has decided to make some changes to the Nasdaq 100 index, its most popular index, according to company representatives, ostensibly to diminish the concentration risk that accompanies having an index that derives more than half of its value from just seven companies.

    Nasdaq announced late last week that the Nasdaq 100
    NDX,
    +1.24%

    will undergo a special rebalancing that will take effect prior to the market open on July 24. It’s only the third time that Nasdaq has announced such an impromptu rejiggering of how much individual stocks contribute to the index. Although Nasdaq can also reconstitute the index regularly every December, and there’s also a mechanism to rebalance every quarter as well.

    In a statement announcing the move, the exchange alluded to the fact that the largest companies in the technology sector have too much sway over the index’s price. Nasdaq said special rebalancing can be implemented “to address overconcentration in the index by redistributing the weights.”

    The rebalancing comes at a critical time. The Nasdaq 100 has risen 40% since the start of 2023, largely thanks to the “Magnificent Seven,” a handful of megacap technology names that have powered much of the U.S. stock market’s rally this year.

    These gains have pushed the index to its highest level since mid-January 2022, meaning that Big Tech has now retraced nearly all of last year’s losses, and might soon be headed for the all-time highs from November 2021.

    As of Thursday, the Magnificent Seven stocks — Nvidia Corp.
    NVDA,
    +3.53%
    ,
    Apple Inc.
    AAPL,
    +0.90%
    ,
    Microsoft Corp.
    MSFT,
    +1.42%
    ,
    Amazon.com Inc.
    AMZN,
    +1.57%
    ,
    Tesla Inc.
    TSLA,
    +0.82%
    ,
    Meta Platforms Inc.
    META,
    +3.70%

    and Alphabet Inc.’s Class A
    GOOGL,
    +1.53%

    and Class C
    GOOG,
    +1.62%

    shares — accounted for 55% of the Nasdaq 100’s market capitalization, while the top five names account for more than 45%.

    According to Nasdaq’s official methodology, the goal is to keep the aggregate weighting of the biggest stocks below 40%. In fact, it’s possible that Tesla Inc. surpassing 4.5% of the index earlier this month triggered the Nasdaq’s rebalancing announcement, according to analysts from UBS Group AG
    UBS,
    +1.87%
    .

    Exactly how it plans to accomplish this isn’t yet known. Nasdaq said the new weighting scheme will be unveiled on Friday, likely after the U.S. market close. But the UBS team has an educated guess.

    “The quarterly reviews would dictate that the aggregate weight to securities exceeding 4.5% be set to 40%. If that’s the approach Nasdaq takes, then we’d expect the weights of Microsoft, Apple, Nvidia, Alphabet, Amazon, and Tesla to be reduced,” the team said in a note shared with MarketWatch.

    For investors trying to anticipate how this might impact their portfolios, here the answers to a few key questions.

    Could the rebalancing kill the U.S. stock market rally?

    Not likely. Or rather: if the rally in Big Tech does falter, history suggests it won’t be because of the rebalancing.

    Here’s more on that from Nicholas Colas, co-founder of DataTrek Research, who discussed the topic in commentary emailed to MarketWatch on Wednesday.

    “…[T]here is the natural inclination to think that the upcoming special reweighting is a sign that large cap disruptive tech is set to roll over because a handful of names have so handily outpaced the rest of its notional peers,” Colas said.

    “History suggests otherwise. The last 2 one-off reweights were in 2011 and 1998. Neither proved to be the end of a Nasdaq 100/tech stock bull market. Not even close, really.”

    More immediately, ETF experts expect trading around the rebalancing will be relatively muted.

    “While it sounds scary, Investors are well positioned — this has been well bantered about,” said David Lutz, head of ETF Trading at Jones Trading, in comments emailed to MarketWatch.

    How could this benefit investors?

    Since megacap technology stocks don’t pay much, if anything, in dividends, the rebalancing could increase the amount of dividends that ETF investors receive each year, according to a team of analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

    Since the largest constituents pay a dividend yield well below the index average, the redistribution of weight from them to the rest of the index will result in a “meaningful boost” to the regular payouts received by investors, which will boost the total return of Nasdaq 100-tracking ETFs and mutual funds.

    Will there be any short-term costs associated with the rebalancing?

    There might be. Since the new index weightings will be announced in advance, investors will have plenty of time to front-run the rebalancing trade.

    Still, there are plenty of hedge funds and proprietary trading firms that run strategies explicitly designed to profit from rebalancing. These firms profits have to come from somewhere, and the logical place would be the fund managers of the Invesco QQQ exchange-traded fund
    QQQ,
    +1.26%

    QQQM,
    +1.27%
    .

    “There are prop traders and hedge funds that run the strategy of providing liquidity to indexes with the expectation that they’ll earn profits,” said Roni Israelov, president and CIO at Wealth Manager NDVR, during a phone interview with MarketWatch.

    “if they are earning profits by providing that liquidity, the expectation is those profits are being paid by investors in those funds.”

    So far at least, markets appear to have taken news of the rebalancing in stride. Megacap technology names tumbled earlier this week, but they’ve since recouped those losses and then some.

    The Nasdaq Composite
    COMP,
    +1.15%
    ,
    another Nasdaq index that isn’t quite as heavily weighted toward Big Tech, rose 1.2% to 13,918.96.

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  • What’s at stake for stock and bond investors in second half of 2023

    What’s at stake for stock and bond investors in second half of 2023

    There’s a lot riding for stock and bond investors in the second half of the year, with the biggest question centered around whether the idea of “immaculate disinflation” can come fully to fruition.

    The term refers to the notion that inflation might meaningfully dissipate from here, without a significant uptick in U.S. unemployment or a major recession. It’s considered to be the perfect scenario for investors and policy makers, who want inflation back down to their 2% target, and one in which the Federal Reserve’s main policy rate target wouldn’t need to go much higher from its current level between 5%-5.25%.

    What makes the path ahead so tricky is that core readings that represent the purest reads on inflation are proving to be stubborn and it isn’t clear whether they’ll turn meaningfully lower, fast. If they don’t, that would likely put pressure on central bankers to keep up their inflation fight and has the potential to drive up interest-rate expectations, as well as Treasury yields. Though the bond market has come around to the fact there won’t likely be any rate cuts by the Fed soon, it still isn’t completely on board with the idea of higher rates for longer — which, in turn, is helping to support equities for now.

    “The problem for the disinflation people or believers is that the core readings continue to come in too high,” said Jeffrey Cleveland, director and chief economist at Payden & Rygel, a Los Angeles-based investment management firm that oversees $148.9 billion in assets.

    Friday’s core reading from the Fed’s favorite inflation gauge — known as the PCE — was 0.3% for the month of May, and has been at or above that mark for six straight months.

    Via phone, Cleveland said his firm expects the monthly core PCE reading to end the year above 0.3%, but “you need monthly core PCE readings to be 0.1% or 0.2% to see meaningful disinflation.” If inflation surprises to the upside, “the whole Treasury curve moves up, with the 2-year rate most susceptible,” which would likely dent the performance of stocks.

    Cleveland said he expects the policy-sensitive 2-year Treasury yield BX:TMUBMUSD02Y to get back to 5% by December — a level that was last seen in March.

    The first six months of this year have turned out to be great for U.S. equities, with the Nasdaq-100
    NDX,
    +1.63%

    on track for its best first-half performance on record, as investors came around to the idea that the economy is resilient enough to absorb higher rates. The unemployment rate stood at 3.7% as of May as the U.S. added a shockingly large number of jobs, while annual core readings from the consumer-price index and PCE index came in at 5.3% and 4.6%, respectively, for May.

    Read: How stocks and every other major asset have performed in first half of 2023 — and over the last 18 months

    Meanwhile, the benchmark 10-year yield
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.812%
    ,
    which reflects investors’ long-term U.S. outlook, has remained relatively contained near 3.75% for months as robust U.S. data rolled in, accompanied by signs of overall inflation easing when waning gas and food prices are factored in.

    Data released this week reaffirmed that the U.S. economy and labor market are holding up, despite 5 percentage points of Fed rate hikes since March 2022. With policy makers signaling two more hikes may be on the way starting in July, the risk is that the economy continues to prove resistant to policy makers’ actions and requires even more tightening.

    “Not only is the U.S. economy continuing to prove resilient in the face of significantly tighter monetary policy, but it also appears the starting point of the economy for 2023 was even higher than previously anticipated with the consumer proving to be an even stronger force across the first three months,” said Stifel, Nicolaus & Co. economists Lindsey Piegza and Lauren Henderson, in a note this week. 

    Via phone, Henderson said her Chicago-based firm isn’t buying into the “immaculate disinflation” theory yet and thinks inflation “is proving stickier and more persistent than many expected.”

    Stifel, which updates its forecasts on a quarterly basis, is standing by its year-end expectations for the 2- and 10-year Treasury yields
    TMUBMUSD10Y,
    3.812%

    to be at 4.65% and 3.45%, respectively, she said. That’s below the current levels for those rates because Stifel economists foresee a short, shallow recession “sometime in the fourth quarter or beyond,” as policy makers push the fed-funds rate target up to 5.75% by year-end and stay there through 2024, according to Henderson.

    Inside the market for fixings, or derivatives-like instruments in which bets can be made on upcoming consumer-price index reports, traders have been coalescing around the view that the annual headline CPI rate is likely to start falling toward 2% this year. They even see the core CPI reading dropping to roughly 2.5% annually and to 0.2% monthly, in relatively quick fashion.

    However, one big name has a warning. Former New York Fed President Bill Dudley said inflation could easily go higher than his estimated 2.5% long-term average, and that the 10-year Treasury yield might even go above his “conservative” estimate of 4.5%.

    On Friday, financial markets were focused on the positive aspects of the PCE report, with all three major U.S. stock indexes
    DJIA,
    +0.97%

    SPX,
    +1.31%

    COMP,
    +1.49%

    higher in afternoon trading. Meanwhile, 3-month
    TMUBMUSD03M,
    5.320%

    through 30-year Treasury yields
    TMUBMUSD30Y,
    3.854%

    all moved lower.

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