Global Asset Allocation Update – February 15, 2016

The risk budgets this month are unchanged. For the moderate risk investor, the allocation between risk assets and bonds remains at 40/60 versus the benchmark of 60/40. While the BofA ML High Yield Master II OAS did widen significantly since the last update I've decided not to reduce the risk allocation more at this time. The stock market selloff and bond market rally has already changed our allocation somewhat and I would not rebalance at this time.

A further reduction in equity exposure at this point is tantamount to predicting a recession and while there is plenty of reason for concern, I don't think we can make that call just yet. The odds have risen but they aren't 100%. With more at stake on the bond side, at this point our bigger risk is that we don't have a recession and adding to bonds at this point could actually be increasing risk. I am making some changes to the bond side for exactly that reason, reducing duration after the big rally on the long end. If we get some kind of countertrend rally in stocks and we have reason to believe recession is more likely, we may yet move the risk allocation lower. But for now, I think our current allocation is adequate protection.

  • High yield spreads continued to widen since the last update, moving from 7.24% to the current 8.87%, a level only recently exceeded during the Euro crisis in 2011. CCC bonds are now trading with a spread over 20%, comparable to the level that preceded the 2001 recession. Spreads have widened across all credit levels including AAA which has widened with Exxon, one of only 3 AAA companies left (MSFT, XOM and JNJ), now on negative credit watch by S&P.
  • Valuation are still excessive and 4th quarter earnings look to come in negative year over year but about 4-5%. That will be three consecutive quarters of year over year decline, something not seen since 2009.
  • Long term momentum is still negative and has quite a long way to go before we can even think about a turn. Short and intermediate indicators are negative as well, although short term is oversold.
  • The yield curve has continued to flatten, now the flattest for this cycle. Real interest rates have fallen since the beginning of the year which has pulled the dollar down and pushed gold higher. Inflation expectations also continue to fall.
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