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US yields at 3.5% would spur stock exodus: Credit Suisse

by The Editor
May 17, 2018
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US yields at 3.5% would spur stock exodus: Credit Suisse
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New York: With the yield on US 10-year Treasuries surging to their highest level in nearly seven years, investors are starting to wonder what will be the threshold triggering a big rotation out of equities and into bonds. Credit Suisse Group AG says were getting dangerously close to the level, yet yields could stall for a while.

This years rise in the yield — trading at 3.08 per cent on Wednesday — has derailed the stock market rally in both the US and Europe, sparking worries over corporate borrowing costs and making the equity asset class less attractive than fixed-income assets overall.

“Treasury yields at 3.5 per cent would push people out of stocks and back into the Treasuries,” Michael OSullivan, chief investment officer for International Wealth Management at Credit Suisse in Zurich, said in a phone interview. OSullivan, who helps oversee about 760 billion Swiss francs ($758 billion) in invested assets, said the exodus from equity funds hasnt started yet, but should become visible when the yield reaches 3.2-3.3 per cent.

Bond yields have been advancing this year, lifted by robust US economic data as well as by worries over a potential pick-up in inflation and the pace of US Federal Reserve rate increases. The move has rattled equity markets, in particular sectors seen as bond proxies such as telecoms and utilities.

While most investors expect higher rates this year, the debate has shifted to the extent of the advance, with JPMorgan Chase & Cos Jamie Dimon and Franklin Templeton suggesting yields are heading toward 4 per cent. According to the latest fund manager survey from Bank of America-Merrill Lynch, asset managers are waiting for the yield to hit 3.6 per cent to reallocate from stocks to bonds.

While the yield seems unstoppable at this point, Credit Suisses OSullivan sees a pause in the coming months as investor focus is set to shift toward risks such as the US fiscal deficit. This should limit the upside in the yield to around 3.2 per cent this year, while the US dollar should fall back.

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