Institutional Investors

Equities Stage Big Rebound, While Bonds See Small Gains; Real Assets Mixed

Equities Stage Big Rebound, While Bonds See Small Gains; Real Assets Mixed
clock
3 min 30 sec

Equity Markets

U.S. stock indices continued to rebound from the 1Q plunge; the Russell 1000 was up more than 50% from the low reached on March 23. The S&P 500 Index was up 8.9% for the quarter, bringing its year-to-date result to 5.6%. However, returns among constituents painted starkly different pictures. Consumer Discretionary (+15%) was the best-performing sector while Energy (-20%) was the worst. YTD, a handful of sectors remain in the red while others are up double-digits. Technology (+29%) and Energy (-48%) share the leader/laggard awards. The pandemic has cast a pall over certain sectors while rewarding others; online retail stocks have soared 60% this year, the home improvement sector is up over 30%, but hotels/cruise lines, airlines, and commercial REITs have dropped over 40%.

A similar and related picture emerges with style indices. The tech-heavy Russell 1000 Growth Index (+13.2%) was again the best performer, and its gain is just shy of 25% YTD. Conversely, the Russell 1000 Value Index was up only 5.6% in the quarter, and it has lost nearly 12% this year. The dispersion between growth and value is near an all-time high and equally stark in small and midcap stocks for both the quarter and YTD. Strong stock performance has been concentrated among a few names in the market. The top five stocks (Facebook, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, and Apple) in the S&P 500 account for 23% of the Index and 33% of the performance. The S&P 500 YTD return would be negative if these stocks were excluded.

Outside of the U.S., equity index returns were positive across developed and emerging markets (MSCI ACWI ex-USA: +6.3%; MSCI Emerging Markets: +9.6%) but both remain down YTD (-5.4%; -1.2%). As in the U.S., growth outperformed value. Among countries in both developed and emerging markets, returns varied widely with some countries posting double-digit gains and others suffering double-digit losses. The U.S. dollar lost ground versus most developed market currencies.

Fixed Income Markets

U.S. Treasury yields held steady over the course of 3Q in spite of strong equity markets and better-than-expected economic data. The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield closed the quarter at 0.69%, up 3 basis points from June 30 but off far more sharply from the year-end level of 1.92%. Its yield hit an all-time low of 0.52% in August. TIPS (Bloomberg Barclays US TIPS: +3.0%) strongly outperformed nominal U.S. Treasuries for the quarter as 10-year breakeven spreads widened from 134 bps to 163 bps. The Bloomberg Barclays US Aggregate Bond Index gained 0.6%, with the corporate and commercial mortgage-backed sectors performing the best. Supply hit record levels as companies rushed to take advantage of ultra-low interest rates. The Bloomberg Barclays High Yield Bond Index was up 4.6% and is now roughly flat YTD. High yield and leveraged loan default rates (5.8% and 4.3% y-o-y as of September, according to data from JP Morgan) continued to trend higher but remain below levels reached in the Global Financial Crisis. Energy and retail sectors have been the hardest hit, with default rates that are approaching 20% for loans and bonds. Downgrades among high yield bonds and loans as well as “fallen angels” (downgrades from investment grade to high yield) reached record levels while recovery rates are near record lows. Separately, municipal bonds (Bloomberg Barclays Muni Bond Index: +1.2%) benefited from favorable supply/demand dynamics.

Broad-based U.S. dollar weakness dampened hedged returns in the quarter. The Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate ex-US Bond Index rose 4.1% (unhedged) and 0.7% (hedged). Emerging market debt indices posted solid results (EMBI Global Div: +2.3%; GBI-EM Gl Div: +0.6%) but remain down from year-end (-0.5%; -6.3%).

Real Assets

Real assets returns were mixed in the third quarter. Falling oil prices hurt MLPs (Alerian MLP: -16.3%) while gold (S&P Gold Spot Price: +5.3%) hit an all-time intraday high in August ($2,005/ounce). The Bloomberg Commodity Index gained 9.1% with all sub-components except Energy up sharply. REITs were mixed (FTSE Nareit: +1.4%) for the quarter and YTD performance is striking: Regional Malls (-54%), Lodging/Resorts (-49%), Shopping Centers (-45%), and Office (-30%) suffering from COVID-19 lockdowns while Data Centers (+26%) and Industrial (+9%) saw gains. TIPS (Bloomberg Barclays TIPS: +3.0%) did well as inflation expectations rose from depressed levels. The 10-year breakeven spread widened from 1.34% to 1.63% over the quarter.

Posted by

Share
Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Related Posts
Private Markets

Private Credit Managers Outperform Leveraged Loans

Daniel Brown
Callan experts analyze private credit performance in 3Q24.
Macro Trends

Are Equity Returns More Volatile in an Election Year? It Depends!

Ric Ford
Two Callan experts assess how the 2024 election may affect stock returns by looking to history.
Public Markets

Stellar Markets Across Asset Classes

Kyle Fekete
Callan expert assesses the global markets in 3Q24 and the outlook heading into the election.
Public Markets

Navigating U.S. Equity Concentration: A Look at Global Stocks

Fanglue Zhou
Callan global ex-U.S. equities expert assesses U.S. equity concentration and opportunities outside the U.S.
Private Markets

Gains Outpace Leveraged Loans Over Time; Spreads Contract

Constantine Braswell
Callan experts analyzes private credit activity in 2Q24.
Public Markets

The Supermicro Conundrum: When Successful Small Cap Stocks Hurt Managers

Nicole Wubbena
Callan expert analyzes the impact of Supermicro on small cap growth managers.
Public Markets

Gains for Stocks Mask Wide Disparities; Little to No Change for Bonds

Kristin Bradbury
Callan expert analyzes the global stock and bond markets in 2Q24.
Operations

A Deeper Look at How We Did With Our Capital Markets Assumptions

Julia Moriarty
An analysis of how Callan's Capital Markets Assumptions performed over time by asset class.
Public Markets

Is This a Time for Active Managers to Shine?

Tony Lissuzzo
A post from a member of the Callan Nonprofit Group on how dispersion affects active management.
Private Markets

Private Credit Gained in 4Q23 but Lagged High Yield Benchmark

Constantine Braswell
Callan expert analyzes private credit activity in 1Q24.

Callan Family Office

You are now leaving Callan LLC’s website and going to Callan Family Office’s website. Callan Family Office is not affiliated with Callan LLC.  Callan LLC has licensed the Callan® trademark to Callan Family Office for use in providing investment advisory services to ultra-high net worth clients, family foundations, and endowments. Callan Family Office and Callan LLC are independent, unaffiliated investment advisory firms separately registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.

Callan LLC is not responsible for the services and content on Callan Family Office’s website. Inclusion of this link does not constitute or imply an endorsement, sponsorship, or recommendation by Callan LLC of their website, or its contents, and Callan LLC is not responsible or liable for your use of it. When visiting their website, you are subject to Callan Family Office’s terms of use and privacy policies.