Displaying items by tag: yields

(New York)

65 Stocks make up the dividend aristocrats in the S&P 500, known for their consistency, however some…see the full story on our partner Magnifi’s site

Published in Eq: Dividends

(New York)

The recovery has boosted the junk bond market as investors saw investment-grade bonds and government debt perform…see the full story on our partner Magnifi’s site

Published in Bonds: High Yield
Wednesday, 14 April 2021 17:30

Fidelity Says High Yield Bonds Will Thrive

(New York)

Despite the big losses in Treasuries, high yield bonds have been doing well, and according to Fidelity that seems likely to continue. Advisors could be forgiven if they are wondering “how?”. The answer is that the big reason bonds are losing is interest rate risk, and it so happens that high yield bonds have some of the lowest interest rate risk around because of their higher coupons and shorter terms. According to Adam Kramer, who managers Fidelity’s Strategic Income Fund, “an economic recovery may be on the horizon and the Fed may avoid tightening monetary conditions for some time”, which he says means the high yield market “could offer investors the best of both worlds in 2021”.


FINSUM: High yield bonds have the lowest exposure to the market’s major risk at the moment and also the upside of an economic recovery. The picture is bright.

Published in Bonds: High Yield
Tuesday, 13 April 2021 14:53

Why Treasuries Could Not Look Worse

(New York)

Q1 ended about as poorly as possible for the treasury market as losses according to ICE indices hit…see the full story on our partner Magnifi’s site

Published in Bonds: Treasuries
Wednesday, 07 April 2021 15:17

Goldman Says a Bond Bull Market Looms

(New York)

Bonds are incredibly expensive right now, but despite this, they may keep going higher, says Goldman Sachs. The firm is specifically referring to high yield bonds, which are very pricey right now and have low spreads to Treasuries. For example, only 10% of high yield bonds currently trade with spreads above 5 percentage points above Treasuries, compared to 25% in November. This makes Goldman believe the easiest gains are already in the bag, but given that high yield bonds are sensitive to an improving economy and they have appreciated even while Treasuries have fallen, Goldman feels the asset class could be in for more appreciation.


FINSUM: This makes sense. It is also worth noting that historically speaking, high yield bonds have no correlation to the performance of Treasuries.

Published in Bonds: High Yield
Page 22 of 108

Contact Us

Newsletter

Subscribe

Subscribe to our daily newsletter

Top