Cash Is King Again – BlackRock’s Buying Bills As Yield Tops Stocks

TINA is dead… cash is king again.

For the first time since June 2008, the yield on the S&P 500 is below that of the ‘as good as cash’ 6-month Treasury-Bill yield.

Simply put – there IS an alternative, and it’s cash…

 

And  BlackRock’s Jeffrey Roszenberg agrees

Short-term bonds are looking attractive again after years of near-zero yields. The Federal Reserve’s rate increase this week only adds to the appeal.

We see short-term U.S. debt offering relatively compelling income, with limited downside risk, now that market participants have greater confidence in the Fed’s planned normalization path. In most of the post-crisis normalization period, the bond market significantly discounted Fed expectations for the pace of normalization.

The market has now caught up with the Fed’s view, with rising short-term interest rates reflecting this greater confidence. Market participants previously had good reason to be skeptical. 2017 was the only year the Fed delivered on its promised pace of normalization. But current economic tailwinds – tax cuts and plans for more government spending – suggest the central bank is poised to extend that recent track record.

Combined with what is already priced into front-end yields, this makes for attractive risk vs. reward. It means an investment perceived as “risk-free” now offers limited downside risk and positive after-inflation yields. A two-year Treasury yield now well above the core inflation rate restores a viable and perceived safe investment option that has been missing since the crisis.

Technical factors such as increasing U.S. Treasury bill issuance – the result of a surging budget deficit – are adding to the factors pulling short-term yields higher and making the short end look more attractive.

Lost revenues from tax cuts, twinned with greater government spending, mean more borrowing to fund deficits. We project the U.S. deficit to hit 5.7% of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2019, the highest since 1960, outside of the 2008 crisis aftermath. The deficit spike comes even as the jobless rate drops to multi-decade lows – an unprecedented disconnect.

Treasury bill and bond issuance are ramping up at a time when the Fed is reducing its reinvestment of maturing bond holdings. We estimate net bill issuance to the tune of roughly $500 billion in 2018, far beyond levels seen in recent years. The result: a need for greater private-sector financing of federal deficits.

The U.S. tax system overhaul also has created incentives for companies to repatriate overseas cash currently held in short-term instruments. Anticipation of these fund outflows is contributing to rising yields on shorter maturities.

Bottom line

We see rising opportunities at the front end of the curve, where yields finally above inflation levels (ZH: and stock dividend yields) offer investors a viable alternative to cash.

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