What corporate bond market does?
Economist explains as to why corporate bonds should probably rally before a genuine rally in equities begins.
“A further dilemma is whether corporate bonds will rally before equities. That would seem logical, given that bonds have a prior claim on corporate profits. In addition, companies seem likely to run their businesses for the benefit of bondholders rather than shareholders, cutting dividends to save cash, for example…there may be a selection problem: weak companies have tended to borrow, and there are very few AAA-rated companies these days. Many of the most heavily-geared companies are in the portfolios of private equity groups, rather than on the quoted market.
Nevertheless, it is hard to see how stock markets can find a bottom if corporate-bond spreads are still widening. In turn, it is hard to see corporate bonds stabilizing without a return to some kind of normality in the money markets, with banks and companies able to borrow freely again (albeit not quite as freely as they did in 2006). So, Libor is the key to a market bottom.”
Explaining the point that corporate bonds should see a rally before a real move upwards in equities a CLSA report explains:
“It is unrealistic to expect any rally in equities without there first being a rally in corporate bonds. At the four great bottoms, the price of BAA corporate credit rose before the price of equities rose.
In 1948, bond and equity markets were distorted by government caps on treasury yields and excess-profit tax on corporate profits.”
Source: Business Week
Source: CLSA
However one has to wait and see how the corporate bond market responds to poor earnings and cash flow reports over the next two quarters. Surprises may call for downgrades and the corporate bond market may reassess the risks again and price it in. This obviously would be negative for the equities.
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