Investment Strategies

Lombard Odier Is Sceptical That There Will Be "Great Rotation" Into Equities

Tom Burroughes Group Editor March 13, 2013

Lombard Odier Is Sceptical That There Will Be

The notion that there will be a mass exodus from expensive US bonds into relatively
cheap equities, dubbed “the great rotation”, is unwarranted,
Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch has said.

While some individual investors can shift from one asset
class to another it is not possible for this to happen in total as the outstanding
stock of assets must be held by someone, the Swiss private bank said in a note,
entitled Dispelling the Myth of the Great
Rotation.

The bank responded to the theme, as highlighted for example
by a cover article in the weekly magazine Barron’s,
that such a large shift between asset classes, encouraged by valuations and
still-cheap interest rates, will occur. Since the start of this year, there has
been expectation of such a shift. In some cases, it is explained as a form of “financial
repression”, as central banks, at the behest of governments, “punish” savers in
cash and certain income assets with very low interest rates, forcing them to
own riskier equities instead.

“As such, the fact that investors currently own lots of
bonds (vs equities) is largely a reflection of strong supply. Indeed, the
massive increase in leverage over the last decade has led to the market
capitalisation of the bond market to rise. Meanwhile, the equity market has
been shrinking with US
companies using proceeds from debt issuance to buy back their own shares,
taking advantage of the gap between (low) financing rates and (higher) cost of
capital,” the firm said. 

“Is it possible, going forward, that higher demand for
equities that are in “short” relative supply drives their prices up, and
conversely for bonds? Clearly, such portfolio rebalancing lies at the very
heart of ongoing global central banks’ interventions. By pushing down expected
returns on low-risk assets, central bankers are attempting to force investors
up the risk curve (read: buy equities), hoping that the induced wealth effect
boost the economy,” Lombard Odier Darier Hentsch said.

“But as they accumulate vast amounts of bonds, they are also
becoming the marginal buyer of that market. And a relatively price insensitive marginal
buyer too, since their primary goal is not to generate an investment return but
to support their countries’ financial system,” it said.

The pick-up in equity fund flows in the first weeks of this
year is typical after a period of strong returns, the bank said, as there is a
reaction to such performance. The bank cautions the latest issuance of big debt
issuance to finance stock buybacks corresponded to market extremes, as in 2000
and 2007.

“All told, far from envisaging a sustained and large equity
rally on the back of a “great rotation”, our best case scenario would be for
the equity rally to lose some steam, and the worst case scenario for it to
experience a significant sell-off. Protect your portfolio, and be ready to move
out of equities back into government bonds when yields normalise,” it said.

 

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