A powerful rally on Friday helped boost prices on a weekly basis for most markets around the world via a set of exchange-traded products. With the exception of US real estate investment trusts (REITs), all the major asset classes ended the trading week on January 4 with gains.
Last week’s biggest gain was posted by stocks in foreign developed-market countries. Vanguard FTSE Developed Markets (VEA) surged 2.3%, marking a second weekly advance and the strongest since November.
The only loser last week for the major asset classes: Vanguard Real Estate (VNQ). This REIT index fund slipped 0.1% for the trading week – the fourth straight decline on a weekly calendar basis. The latest dip leaves the ETF close to its lowest close since last May.
Learn To Use R For Portfolio Analysis
Quantitative Investment Portfolio Analytics In R:
An Introduction To R For Modeling Portfolio Risk and Return
By James Picerno
Last week’s upside bias flowed through to 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 jumped 1.6% last week, the benchmark’s second straight weekly gain.
Despite last week’s powerful rallies, all but one of the major asset classes remain deep in the hole for the trailing one-year change. The lone exception: investment-grade bonds in the US. Vanguard Total Bond Market (BND) is ahead by 0.4% as of Friday’s close vs. the year-earlier price (after including distributions).
The rest of the field is posting losses for the one-year window. The biggest setback is in emerging-markets stocks: Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets (VWO) has shed 15.9% over the past year.
By comparison, GMI.F’s one-year decline is a relatively middling -6.4%.
Reviewing the asset classes via current drawdown reveals that investment-grade US bonds are posting the smallest decline: BND’s peak-to-trough slide is a slight -0.3%.
By contrast, the biggest drawdown is in broadly defined commodities: iPath Bloomberg Commodity (DJP) has shed more than 50% relative to its previous peak.
GMI.F’s current drawdown: -10.1%.
Is Recession Risk Rising? Monitor the outlook with a subscription to:
The US Business Cycle Risk Report
Pingback: Powerful Rally Boosts Global Markets - TradingGods.net