Capital Markets

Big Bounce for All Asset Classes

Big Bounce for All Major Asset Classes
clock
3 min 34 sec

Equity Markets

U.S. equity markets had no problem erasing the pain of the fourth quarter as the S&P 500 rose 13.7% with double-digit gains across capitalization and style spectrums. On a relative basis, growth outperformed value (Russell 1000 Growth: +16.1% vs. Russell 1000 Value: +11.9%), small cap outperformed large cap (Russell 2000: +14.6% vs. Russell 1000: +14.0%), and virtually all sectors delivered double-digit results, with the exceptions being Financials (+8.6%) and Health Care (+6.6%).

Volatility returned to more normalized levels, with just a few trading days seeing market movement of more than 2% in either direction (versus nearly 20% in the fourth quarter).

Non-U.S. developed (MSCI EAFE: 10.0%) and emerging market equities (MSCI Emerging Markets: +9.9%) also rebounded strongly in the first quarter, but trailed their U.S. counterparts (and failed to make up for the pain felt in the fourth quarter). The U.K. (+11.9%), Canada (+15.4%), and Italy (+14.6%) were among the standout performers, while Japan (+6.7%) was a laggard but positive nonetheless. Similarly, emerging market performance was robust across the board with all the BRIC countries up strongly: China (+17.7%), India (+7.2%), Russia (+12.2%), and Brazil (+8.1%). Turkey’s GDP dropped 3% year-over-year in the fourth quarter amid economic and political woes and was the worst-performing country (-3.2%).

Fixed Income Markets

In the U.S., the Bloomberg Barclays US Aggregate Bond Index rose 2.9% for the quarter, with investment grade corporates (Bloomberg Barclays Corporate: +5.1%) up the most. Yields fell sharply in March as the market digested unexpectedly dovish comments from the Fed. The 10-year U.S. Treasury returned 2.8% and its yield closed the quarter at 2.41%, down nearly 30 basis points from year-end and significantly from the multi-year high of 3.24% hit in early November. Portions of the yield curve inverted, but the widely watched spread between the 2- and 10-year Treasury note remained positive at 14 bps.

The high yield corporate bond market (Bloomberg Barclays High Yield: +7.3%) soared and the sector’s yield-to-worst ended the quarter at 6.4% after surging to nearly 8% in the fourth quarter. Similarly, leveraged loans were up 4.0% after falling 3.5% (S&P LSTA) in the fourth quarter. While the fundamental picture for corporations remains intact, these returns were driven primarily by a strong technical tailwind on the back of a very weak December.

Municipal bonds (Bloomberg Barclays Municipal Bond: +2.9%) outperformed U.S. Treasuries and were also helped by a favorable supply/demand backdrop. Municipal mutual funds absorbed roughly $24 billion in inflows—the best first quarter since data collection began in 1992.

The Global Aggregate Index rose 2.2% for the quarter on an unhedged basis. On a hedged basis, the Index gained 3.0%. The dollar appreciated modestly vs. the euro and yen, but lost ground vs. the U.K. pound and Canadian dollar. In Germany, the yield on the 10-year bond turned negative for the first time since late 2016 and closed the quarter at -0.07%. Emerging market debt also benefited from the reversal in risk appetite. The U.S. dollar-denominated JPM EMBI Global Diversified Index gained 7.0% with none of the index’s 60+ countries delivering a negative result.

Local currency emerging market debt, as measured by the JPM GBI-EM Global Diversified Index, was up a more modest 2.9%, with notable underperformers being Turkey (-10.2%) and Argentina (-10.5%).

Real Assets

Real assets of all varieties enjoyed a strong first quarter of the year, perhaps none more than crude oil as the price of West Texas Intermediate extended over +30% through the end of March. Energy as a whole (measured by the Bloomberg Commodity Energy subindex) was up nearly 16%, while commodities broadly produced a more modest positive return in the first quarter (Bloomberg Commodity TR Index: +6.3%) as gains in energy and metals were offset by negative returns for natural gas and the agriculture complex as a whole (Bloomberg Commodity Agriculture subindex: -3.2%).

Other, yield-oriented real asset categories also saw healthy gains. Somewhat influenced by the buoyant price of oil (and equity markets as well), MLPs (Alerian MLP Index: +16.8%) also enjoyed a strong start to the year with the yield spread between the Alerian Index and the 10-year Treasury remaining fairly wide at +500 bps. Both U.S.- and non-U.S.-listed real estate saw double digit gains in the first quarter (FTSE NAREIT Equity: +16.3%; FTSE EPRA/NAREIT Global: +15.0%) as did listed infrastructure assets (Dow Jones Brookfield Global Infrastructure: +15.7%).

Posted by

Share
Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin

Tags

Categories

Related Posts
Private Markets

Income Returns Positive for Private Real Estate; REITs Top Equities

Munir Iman
Callan expert analyzes real estate in 3Q24.
Private Markets

Higher Beta Hedge Fund Strategies Have a Strong Quarter

Joe McGuane
Callan expert analyzes hedge fund and MAC performance in 3Q24.
Private Markets

Private Credit Managers Outperform Leveraged Loans

Daniel Brown
Callan experts analyze private credit performance in 3Q24.
Private Markets

Fewer Funds Raised in Private Equity, but More Dollars Flow Into Them

Ashley Kahn
Callan expert analyzes private equity activity in 3Q24.
Operations

IRS Guidance: How Reliable Is It?

Jana Steele
Callan expert explains the different types of IRS guidance.
Operations

IRS Announces Updated DC Plan Limits for 2025

Jamie McAllister
These are the new limits for contributions to DC plans for 2025.
ESG

Interest in ESG Stays Level, Exclusive Callan Survey Finds

Hannah Vieira
Callan experts explain the results of the 2024 ESG Survey.
Macro Trends

Public DB Plan Trends (and Some That Will Be)

Weston Lewis
Callan consultant analyzes public DB plan trends over the last 20 years.
Operations

Offering Employees Choice: DC, HSA/HRA, or Student Loan Repayments

Jana Steele
Callan DC plan expert explains the implications of a new IRS private letter ruling.
Macro Trends

Are Equity Returns More Volatile in an Election Year? It Depends!

Ric Ford
Two Callan experts assess how the 2024 election may affect stock returns by looking to history.

Callan Family Office

You are now leaving Callan LLC’s website and going to Callan Family Office’s website. Callan Family Office is not affiliated with Callan LLC.  Callan LLC has licensed the Callan® trademark to Callan Family Office for use in providing investment advisory services to ultra-high net worth clients, family foundations, and endowments. Callan Family Office and Callan LLC are independent, unaffiliated investment advisory firms separately registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940.

Callan LLC is not responsible for the services and content on Callan Family Office’s website. Inclusion of this link does not constitute or imply an endorsement, sponsorship, or recommendation by Callan LLC of their website, or its contents, and Callan LLC is not responsible or liable for your use of it. When visiting their website, you are subject to Callan Family Office’s terms of use and privacy policies.