Surge in bonds and emerging markets fuels bubble
By Jennifer Ablan - Analysis
NEW YORK (Reuters) - U.S. government bonds and emerging-market equities have benefited as investors have sought refuge from the housing and credit crises, but the two asset classes' surge in popularity is inflating a dangerous bubble that is likely to burst.
Last year, U.S. Treasuries benefited tremendously from the flight from risk as the credit crisis began. But the sector's popularity took off when the Federal Reserve started cutting interest rates aggressively last September to support the economy. It has reduced its target for the fed funds rate by 2.25 percentage points, to 3 percent.
Short-maturing U.S. Treasuries have returned nearly 7 percent since August, while 10-year Treasury notes have posted returns of over 11 percent, according to Merrill Lynch data.
Not coincidentally, the S&P 500 .SPX, Dow industrial .DJI and Nasdaq Composite .IXIC indexes in 2007 posted their worst annual returns in four years.
Dan Fuss, co-manager of the $16.8 billion Loomis Sayles Bond Fund, sold nearly all of his long-maturing Treasury holdings in recent weeks because he sees more risks than value there.
"Treasuries are in a bubble, in a hot air balloon, and now it is starting to leak," Fuss said.
On Friday, the 30-year Treasury bond fell for a fourth straight day, ending its worst week of losses since early December and pushing its yield to the highest level of the year.
For their part, emerging-market equities, already having posted five years of ample gains, were boosted further by the Fed's rate-cutting moves as investors saw them fueling those faster-growing economies more than any others.
Last year, emerging-market equity funds took in a record $54 billion of net inflows and delivered 36.50 percent in returns.
10-YEAR TRADES AT 30 TIMES EARNINGS
It's not just bond experts who are avoiding bonds.
Legg Mason's Bill Miller, one of the most prominent value stock investors, recently wrote in a letter to investors that government bonds have performed extremely well as the traditional safe haven, but are now "very expensive."
The 10-year Treasury trades at almost 30 times earnings, compared with about 14 times for the S&P 500, Miller noted.
"The two-year Treasury yields under 2 percent, and is thus valued at over 50x earnings!" Miller wrote. "The valuation disparity between Treasuries and stocks is as great today in favor of stocks as it was in favor of Treasuries 20 years ago."
The two-year Treasury note, now yielding 1.90 percent, has a lower yield than the S&P 500, Miller said. "And that is before share repurchases, meaning you can get a greater yield in an index fund than you can in the two-year, and a free long-term call option on growth," he added. Continued...




