Across-The-Board Losses For The Major Asset Classes Last Week

Selling weighed on all the main categories of global markets last week, based on a set of exchange-traded products. The biggest slide: stocks in emerging markets.

Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets (VWO) slumped a hefty 3.8% in the US-holiday-shortened trading week through September 7. The decline left the ETF at its lowest close in more than a year.

An escalating trade war is a factor weighing on sentiment for assets in emerging markets. Rising interest rates in the US are another.

“Emerging economies have borne the brunt of the market stress since the start of the year,” wrote Didier Saint-Georges, managing director at asset manager Carmignac, in a note to clients. “In drying up the global flow of dollars, the Fed has weakened the entire EM asset class and literally wrecked those countries most reliant on dollar financing. The trade standoff initiated by the Trump administration thus amounts to a double whammy, with contagion doing the rest of the damage.”


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Foreign junk bonds posted the smallest loss last week. VanEck Vectors International High Yield Bond (IHY) shed a relatively light 0.1%.

Last week’s selling nicked an ETF-based version of the Global Markets Index (GMI.F). This investable, unmanaged benchmark that holds all the major asset classes in market-value weights slumped 1.3% last week — its first weekly decline in a month.

For one-year results, US stocks are still the extreme bullish outlier. Vanguard Total Stock Market (VTI) posted a strong 19.5% total return for the 12 months through last week’s close. No other corner of the major asset classes comes close.

The second-best performance for the one-year change: Vanguard Real Estate (VNQ), which is up a modest 1.8% for the trailing one-year period.

The biggest setback over the past year: VanEck Vectors JP Morgan Emerging Local Currency Bond (EMLC), which has lost 14.2% as of Friday’s close vs. the year-ago level (even after factoring in distributions).

For perspective, GMI.F is up 6.9% over the past year in total-return terms.

For current drawdown, broadly defined commodities continue to post the biggest decrease. The iPath Bloomberg Commodity (DJP) is nursing a nearly 50% peak-to-trough decline. At the opposite extreme, US junk bonds have a virtually nil drawdown at the moment, based on SPDR Bloomberg Barclays High Yield Bond (JNK).

GMI.F’s current drawdown is a mild -3.3%.


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