Idiots!
Professional investors LOVE bonds right now – more than they have in over a decade.
You know me… I don’t want to follow the crowd. Instead, I want to buy what’s HATED – not LOVED.
The ideal time to go against the crowd is when all of the crowd is doing exactly the same thing.
The “professionals” on Wall Street are ignoring the most important anomaly in the market today. And they’re advising folks to do the exact wrong thing as a result.
Let me give you the specifics…
Fund managers are the most bullish they’ve been on bonds since 2008, based on the most recent Bank of America Merrill Lynch Global Fund Manager Survey.
The report’s conclusion was simple: “This is the most bullish Fund Manager Survey view on bonds since November of 2008.”
Later in the report, it said fund managers have their highest allocation to bonds since 2011.
Meanwhile, long-term bonds are the worst deal they have been in American history based on what they pay. Ten-year U.S. Treasury bonds were paying less than 1.5% interest just a couple weeks ago.
So it’s shocking that fund managers see the biggest opportunity in bonds – bonds that pay some of the lowest yields in history.
This tells me the “pros” have forgotten one of the most critical rules in finance…
I’ve been in the finance world for more than 25 years. And as you know, one of the major takeaways I’ve learned is that money flows to where it’s treated best. It’s that simple.
So let me ask you this… With stocks trading at reasonable valuations and bonds paying almost nothing, is your money treated best in the bond market?
The pros have gotten this one wrong today. They say to buy bonds. I say they’re nuts!
It’s even harder to believe, considering the anomaly that just happened between the stock and bond markets. This one’s truly crazy…
Just a couple of weeks ago, U.S. stocks were yielding more than long-term U.S. Treasury bonds.
I’m not kidding. You were getting paid LESS to lock up your money with the government for 30 years than to put it in stocks.
That’s nuts. It’s the kind of thing that should never happen.
You see, in normal times, investors are willing to take less yield in stocks for the chance to make capital gains. Stock market dividends have always been just a little something to sweeten the deal… especially over the last couple decades as share buybacks became so popular, pushing capital gains higher.
On the other hand, investors expect a higher yield when they put money to work in Treasury bonds because they won’t see any price appreciation.
That’s the normal order of things – but it’s not what just happened. Instead, there was a multiday stretch where the stock market paid higher yields than 30-year Treasury bonds.
If you’re thinking this sounds like a rare event, you’d be right. It’s only happened two other times going all the way back to the 1980s… in 2008 and 2016. And both of those instances were fantastic times to own stocks. (I’ll explain the full details in tomorrow’s issue of DailyWealth.)
The implication here is obvious… We could be on the verge of a major move higher in stocks. That might seem crazy right now, during the late innings of a great bull market. But it’s my Melt Up thesis in action.
The majority of the world is scared. Folks believe stocks “should” fall after this historic run-up. And that’s caused the pros to get extremely bullish on bonds… at the worst possible time.
I say to do the opposite. Be bold and buy. Now is the time to do it.
Good investing,
Steve
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Source: Daily Wealth