MSSB urges safety first, citing worries over European slump

MAR 04, 2012
Researchers at Morgan Stanley's $1.6 trillion wealth management arm are favoring cash and investment-grade bonds even as stocks and junk bonds rally, claiming that a looming recession in Europe is keeping markets “far from worry-free.” Morgan Stanley Smith Barney LLC recommends that investors be underweight riskier assets, maintaining cautious allocations adopted in October, strategists led by chief investment officer Jeff Applegate wrote in a report distributed last week. The strategists made the call last week as the S&P 500 climbed to the highest level since 2008. Speculative-grade debt gained 1.8% in February after the best back-to-back months since 2009. “Despite the markets' positive reactions to the news flow, the fundamental backdrop is far from worry-free,” the strategists wrote, citing a lack of eurozone economic growth and a decline in German exports in December. “These data suggest Europe has already entered a recession. So far, knock-on effects to the U.S. economy have not materialized, but given the substantial trade linkages within the global economy, any European recession is likely to wash up on U.S. shores.” While the MSSB report said it's “an opportune time to harvest gains in lower-quality credits,” JPMorgan Chase & Co.'s high-yield strategists raised their estimate for 2012 junk bond returns to 13.7%, from 9.4%. Bank of America Merrill Lynch strategists anticipate a 12.3% rally for the assets this year. The bonds have gained 4.8% this year through Feb. 24, Merrill Lynch index data show.

"DUE FOR A PAUSE'

As of Feb. 24, relative yields on high-yield, high-risk debt had fallen to 6.01% above Treasuries, the lowest since Aug. 3, according to the index data. “With less compelling credit valuations, a possibility that domestic economic data may struggle to surprise to the upside and the continuing sovereign-debt drama in Europe, we believe that the credit rally is due for a pause or possibly even a partial reversal in the coming months,” the MSSB strategists wrote. “Investors should consider harvesting some profits where appropriate.” Reports issued last month showed that European services and manufacturing output unexpectedly shrank in February as the euro-area economy struggled to rebound from a contraction in the fourth quarter, and that German exports fell in December four times more than economists forecast. In a moderate balanced strategic portfolio, Mr. Applegate's team recommends 30%in investment-grade debt, including short-duration government, corporate and securitized bonds; 4% in high-yield debt; 32% in global equities; and 26% in alternative and absolute-return investments, according to the report.

Latest News

Newsom wants nationwide billionaires tax as presidential bid may loom on the horizon
Newsom wants nationwide billionaires tax as presidential bid may loom on the horizon

“It’s time for an economic reset,” wrote the California governor, in a post on X.

Maryland regulators spank fledgling art-focused RIA Masterworks over registration snafus
Maryland regulators spank fledgling art-focused RIA Masterworks over registration snafus

Masterworks was launched in 2017 but its RIA, Masterworks Advisers, is just three years old.

Investors allege Miami operator took over $1.5 million in EB-5 scheme
Investors allege Miami operator took over $1.5 million in EB-5 scheme

One 2017 form, no broker license, and a $42 million gap they say surfaced on a webinar.

Gen X, millennials lag in retirement confidence amid knowledge gap
Gen X, millennials lag in retirement confidence amid knowledge gap

Fewer than half of Americans in their peak earning years feel on track for retirement, while many say limited financial knowledge and access to professional guidance are holding them back.

Advisor moves: Veteran-led UBS team overseeing $460 million migrates to Merrill
Advisor moves: Veteran-led UBS team overseeing $460 million migrates to Merrill

Meanwhile, Wells Fargo hauled advisors overseeing $825 million in the West Coast, while Wedbush has welcomed a seasoned professional from Stifel in California.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.