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HOT PORK ROLLS

A Week of Auctions and Announcements

Incorporating Smart Beta Strategies in Asset Allocation

US Quantitative Easing – A boon or bane for the “Fragile Five”?

Weekend with the G20

HOT PORK ROLLS

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Jodie Gunzberg

Former Managing Director, Head of U.S. Equities

S&P Dow Jones Indices

For any investor who has chosen lean hogs as the commodity to invest in 2014, s/he is as “happy as a pig in the index“. The S&P GSCI Lean Hogs are the 3rd best performing commodity in the index YTD, up 16.3%, before the roll.  Even after the roll, the lean hogs are the 5th best performing commodity in the S&P GSCI and the best performing commodity in its sector, livestock. Now the  S&P GSCI Lean Hogs is just 4.5% short of reaching its all-time index level high which occurred in March 2011.  

Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and/or its affiliates. Data from Jan 1973 to Feb 2014. Past performance is not an indication of future results. This chart reflects hypothetical historical performance. Please see the Performance Disclosure at the end of this document for more information regarding the inherent limitations associated with backtested performance.
Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and/or its affiliates. Data from Jan 1973 to Feb 2014. Past performance is not an indication of future results. This chart reflects hypothetical historical performance. Please see the Performance Disclosure at the end of this document for more information regarding the inherent limitations associated with backtested performance.

Rising expectations that cash hog supplies will tighten soon and an increase in wholesale-pork prices have supported the lean hogs in the index. Packers were willing to pay higher prices to insure their immediate slaughter needs (known as convenience yield) were covered as they attempt to catch up production in the wake of weather-induced closures and delays (known as expectational variance or supply shocks). Summer hog contracts remain strong on the expectation Porcine Epidemic Diarrhea virus (PEDv), which is fatal to baby pigs, will cut the U.S. hog herd.

Average monthly returns between Jan-Feb of 2014 of 7.9% are the highest of any first two months since 1999. Further, the average monthly summer backwardation in 2013 of 4.2% was the highest since 2001 and has been increasing since 2010, when it was just 1.9%.  Also in history, only in 14 of 39 years have we seen  backwardation in February and we haven’t seen three years in a row with a backwardated February, like we see now, since 1978-80. 

In the summer months of June-Sept, during the years of backwardation in February, the average monthly total return of lean hogs was 117 basis points higher than in all the years taken together. If this pattern continues with tight supplies of lean hogs, there could be a hot roll this summer. Though one might be cautious given the history of abundance in March.

See in the charts below the data showing historical average returns, backwardation and contango.

Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and/or its affiliates. Data from Jan 1973 to Feb 2014. Past performance is not an indication of future results. This chart reflects hypothetical historical performance. Please see the Performance Disclosure at the end of this document for more information regarding the inherent limitations associated with backtested performance.

Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and/or its affiliates. Data from Jan 1973 to Feb 2014. Past performance is not an indication of future results. This chart reflects hypothetical historical performance. Please see the Performance Disclosure at the end of this document for more information regarding the inherent limitations associated with backtested performance.
Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and/or its affiliates. Data from Jan 1973 to Feb 2014. Past performance is not an indication of future results. This chart reflects hypothetical historical performance. Please see the Performance Disclosure at the end of this document for more information regarding the inherent limitations associated with backtested performance.
Source: S&P Dow Jones Indices and/or its affiliates. Data from Jan 1973 to Feb 2014. Past performance is not an indication of future results. This chart reflects hypothetical historical performance. Please see the Performance Disclosure at the end of this document for more information regarding the inherent limitations associated with backtested performance.

 

 

The posts on this blog are opinions, not advice. Please read our Disclaimers.

A Week of Auctions and Announcements

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Kevin Horan

Former Director, Fixed Income Indices

S&P Dow Jones Indices

The S&P/BGCantor Current 10 Year U.S. Treasury Bond Index closed last week up 0.12%.  January’s Housing Starts number of 880k fell well below the 950k expected number and the prior revised level of 1048k pushing Treasuries up for the week.  The question was how much of the number was due to harsh winter weather or whether a slower economy might be a factor.

The Treasury will be coming to market with supply of 2’s (both floating & fixed), 5’s and 7-year notes. The $109 billion in debt will be auctioned this week.

This week will bring more housing and economic information.  Already U.S. Treasuries are slightly down in price as the Chicago Fed National Activity Index reported a -0.39.  The expected number was -0.20 and the prior December number was a 0.16 which later was revised down to -0.03.  The Dallas Fed Manufacturing Outlook reflected the same sluggishness in the economy as February number was a 0.3 versus a prior 3.8.  Tomorrow’s House Price Index release along with the S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index should add insight on top of last week’s Housing Starts number.  Also due to be release this week, outside of housing indicators, will be Durable Goods, Initial Jobless Claims, GDP information and the University of Michigan Confidence Index.  Each and every one of the numbers has the potential to shed more transparency on the overall strength of the economic recovery.

Very little curve movement for this month has the S&P U.S. Issued Investment Grade Corporate Bond Index returning only 0.22% for the month.  The OAS (Option-Adjusted Spread) of the S&P U.S. Issued Investment Grade Corporate Bond Index is pretty much unchanged for February, while in January they were tighter by 8 basis points.  The BBB rating sub-index has tightened in both January and February as moving back down in credit to gain yield has picked up again.

The performance of high yield as measured by the S&P U.S. Issued High Yield Corporate Bond Index reflects the need for yield.  The index is returning 1.26% for the month and 2.03% year-to-date.  The loans in the S&P/LSTA U.S. Leveraged Loan 100 Index have not kept pace with the longer duration high yield index as loans returns 0.04% for the month and 0.65% year-to-date.  Though, a reversal in the direction of rates could change the story very quickly when comparing loans to high yield.

 

Source: S&P Down Jones Indices, Data as of 2/21/2014, Leverage Loan data as of 2/23/2014.

The posts on this blog are opinions, not advice. Please read our Disclaimers.

Incorporating Smart Beta Strategies in Asset Allocation

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Xiaowei Kang

Former Senior Director, Co-Head of Global Research

S&P Dow Jones Indices

It is now a well-established trend that institutional investors are allocating to smart beta / risk premia strategies. In a recent survey of 300 institutional investors, 42% of the investors say they have committed a portion of their portfolios to smart beta, while a further 24% say they intend to do so in the future. Regionally speaking, Europe has led the way in the adoption of smart beta, as there are a much higher percentage of European institutional investors making allocation than that of North America and Asia Pacific.

Smart beta strategies typically capture some of the well-known systematic risk premia, such as small cap, value, low volatility, momentum and quality in equities, as well as curve, value, and momentum in commodities. Investors are increasingly using such strategies as building blocks of asset allocation, often with an objective to achieve certain investment outcomes, such as volatility reduction, diversification, and return enhancement.

Exhibit: Categorization of Smart Beta Equity Strategies

Smart Beta Equity Strategies

Source:  S&P Dow Jones Indices.

The development of smart beta strategies represents an opportunity for individual and institutional investors, as it expands the toolkits investors can use in their portfolio construction and asset allocation. As investors become increasingly aware of the potential benefits and risks of smart beta strategies, the adoption of smart beta may continue to gather pace over the coming years. In particular, investors may increasingly take a multi-factor and multi-asset-class approach to smart beta investing, where they aim to harvest risk premia across asset classes via efficient and low cost vehicles.

Join us at our complimentary seminars to hear our panel of industry thinkers discuss the trends, opportunities and challenges in incorporating smart beta and risk premia strategies in asset allocation. Register here: http://bit.ly/1jDrPqj

The posts on this blog are opinions, not advice. Please read our Disclaimers.

US Quantitative Easing – A boon or bane for the “Fragile Five”?

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Alka Banerjee

Former Managing Director, Product Management

S&P Dow Jones Indices

2013 was a seminal year for US equities with markets going up 33%. Emerging markets on the other hand did not fare so well and were relatively flat with a negative 1.27%. India ended the year down at 4.8%, hit strongly by currency woes, but the year was very volatile for most emerging markets. Some countries, famously dubbed as the ‘Fragile Five’ , namely Brazil, India, South Africa, Indonesia and Turkey are seen as more vulnerable than others, largely because of slowing economic growth, high inflation, large fiscal deficits, and depreciating currencies. These countries have come to symbolize what seems to ail emerging markets in general, which have depended on large foreign investments to fund their economic growth and fill their current account deficits. Some have even likened the situation to the Asian crisis of 1997, but a number of factors including the emerging markets own higher sophistication and awareness of such perils discounts such a possibility.

The US Federal Reserve’s announcement last summer of tapering the Quantitative easing sent shivers down the emerging markets spine. When liquidity dries up in the largest market in the world, albeit slowly and surely, the first to be hit are the riskier investments and emerging markets will be the first to feel that impact. The US economy is working under a cautious note of optimism that economic growth is back on track post 2008, and tapering will not really hurt growth prospects. Indeed the decision on tapering is itself seen as a vote of confidence that the economic growth is on track in the 2-3% range. Emerging markets are feeling the impact of the announced tapering more. The Indian government has put curbing inflation high on its agenda ahead of economic growth as can be seen by a number of rate increases in the previous months. Plans are being laid out to limit fiscal deficit to 4.6% of GDP as per the interim budget and the Indian Rupee has remained somewhat stable in the RS 62-63 range.

Overall, the short term volatility seen in emerging markets need not become a long term trend, but is more a result of uncertain economic and political situation in some of the emerging markets including India, but if the measures to limit the deficits and boost investment and growth are successful we can expect to see more stable market trends in the coming months. Over the long term investors remain committed to India, but over the short term a few see this as a buying opportunity while the majority prefer a wait and watch policy with expectations that the bottom may be finally close.

Watch the live interview with ET Now.

Alka_ETNOW_Fragilefive

The posts on this blog are opinions, not advice. Please read our Disclaimers.

Weekend with the G20

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David Blitzer

Former Managing Director and Chairman of the Index Committee

S&P Dow Jones Indices

The weekend meeting of 20 major global economies representing 85% of world GDP called for adding half a percentage point of growth each year to 2018 through renewed and aggressive stimulus.  So far this is talk, but there is a chance for action.  The G20 will convene again in November to show what they’ve done.  Policy shifts and the move to stimulus will be focused on the developed countries – emerging markets will focus on debt and currency issues. Stimulus programs will differ from one country to another. Europe is likely to see renewed calls for more easing from the ECB and more open labor markets.

US picture is different: The Fed is firmly on course to taper QE3 and gradually move to tighter monetary policy, especially after the FOMC mentioned raising interest rates.  As a result the focus will shift to fiscal policy.  This fits with the Administration’s goals to talk about taxes and income distribution and to increase spending in anticipation of the fall mid-term Congressional elections.  With the debt ceiling set aside until March 2015, there is a chance for a fiscal policy discussion that isn’t driven by fears of the deficit.

Stimulus — both domestic and international – should be a plus for the stock market, but probably not a big enough plus to give us a repeat of 2013’s market results.  For fixed income, stimulus and tighter Fed policy mean higher interest rates.

The posts on this blog are opinions, not advice. Please read our Disclaimers.