Economy Continues to Stabilize; Abundant Slack Remains
Financial markets and the broader economy continued to stabilize during the third quarter after the extraordinary events of last year. The Barclays Capital U.S. Aggregate Index, a widely used index of U.S. high-grade bonds, returned 3.74 percent during the quarter. Treasury yields were less volatile than in the first half of 2009 and fell across maturities. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury ended the quarter at 3.31 percent, down 23 basis points from the end of the second quarter.
Policy initiatives - such as the Federal Reserve’s purchase of mortgage and Treasury securities, the government’s support for consumer finance markets and near-zero short term rates - helped revive risk appetites and were the major factors behind enhanced stability. Two key programs were extended during the third quarter.
The Fed committed to complete its $1.25 trillion program to buy mortgage-backed bonds and extended the end date of the program to March 2010 from December 2009. Massive purchases of mortgages from this program, roughly two-thirds complete by quarter-end, helped hold down mortgage rates and supported the fragile housing market. The Fed and the Treasury also announced the extension of the Term Asset-backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF program, which provides financing to investors buying consumer asset-backed securities (ABS). Originally set to expire in December of this year, TALF was extended through March 2010 for consumer ABS.
Manufacturing and housing data showed improvement in the third quarter, suggesting that the recession was close to an end. Even so, substantial slack remained in the economy, leading the Fed to announce that it would keep the federal funds rate near zero “for an extended period.” The unemployment rate moved closer to 10 percent, making any revival in consumer spending highly unlikely. Businesses continued to draw down inventories, albeit at a slower rate than earlier in the year. Industrial capacity utilization hovered near record lows at below 70 percent, discouraging new investment. Policymakers faced with these dismal fundamentals were in no position to contemplate withdrawal of stimulus programs any time soon.
Emerging Local Bonds’ Positive Performance Continues amid Disinflationary Pressures, Monetary Easing and Increased Risk Appetite
Emerging local market bonds continued their positive momentum and delivered a total return of 8.65 percent for the third quarter, as measured by the JP Morgan Government Bond Index-Emerging Markets (GBI-EM) Global Diversified Index. Monetary easing, disinflationary forces and continued strength in EM (Emerging Markets) currencies versus the dollar as risk appetite increased led the market higher for the period.
For the quarter, Emerging Europe was the strongest performing region, returning 13.30 percent; Latin America and Asia followed, returning 7.31 percent and 6.49 percent, respectively. The Middle East/Africa lagged with a return of 4.90 percent for the period.
For the period, the countries in Emerging Europe outperformed the overall market with the exception of Russia. In Hungary, the strongest performing country in the index, the Central Bank embarked upon monetary easing in the face of declining growth and as improvement in the external financing situation facilitated some stabilization in the Forint. The country returned 15.89 percent. Poland and Turkey returned 12.02 and 11.91 percent, respectively. In Turkey the Central Bank continued its easing bias with 150 basis points in cuts during the quarter.
Latin America was boosted by returns from Brazil and Colombia. In Brazil, Q2 GDP was better than expected at 1.9 percent quarter over quarter vs. the 1.7 percent expected. Moody’s upgraded the county’s local currency long term debt to investment grade bringing it in line with S&P and Fitch ratings. In Colombia, the Central Bank surprised the markets with a 50 basis points cut. The country returned 14.95 percent for the quarter. Mexico posted a return of 0.08 percent as the country’s economy does not yet show signs of consistent recovery; the Central Bank was on hold throughout much of the period.
In Asia, Indonesia returned 14.96 percent, boosted by the economic resilience of the country and the Central Bank’s monetary easing throughout much of the period. Moody’s upgraded the country’s sovereign foreign currency rating by one notch with stable outlook (Ba2/BB+/BB). |