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As the US economy reopens following the COVID-19-induced recession and bond yields finally tick up, how should investors shift their fixed-income portfolios to take advantage of the coming economic recovery?
Most assume that as the United States emerges from recession, there is no better place for their debt allocation. But, in fact, our analysis reveals that international and emerging markets may stand to benefit the most from the expanding US consumer demand.
Indeed, during economic recoveries in the United States, emerging market debt — both corporate and sovereign — has outperformed US-based debt by over 8 percentage points per year, far more than amid recessions or “normal times.”
That’s the conclusion of our examination of all USD denominated mutual funds’ monthly returns across multiple asset classes going back to 1990.
Following the NBER classification of business cycles, we isolated four recessions over the last 30-plus years: July 1990 to March 1991, March 2001 to November 2001, December 2007 to June 2009, and February 2020 to the present. We then analyzed how the average fixed-income mutual fund in each grouping performed during these recessions, the two years following these recessions, and “normal times.”
Whose Debt Does Best?
Emerging Market | Emerging Market Sovereign | International | International Sovereign | |
US Recovery | 18.78% | 15.45% | 11.54% | 14.47% |
Normal Times | 10.08% | 5.96% | 3.65% | 3.68% |
US Recession | 9.45% | 3.15% | 3.91% | 3.59% |
US Long-Term | US Intermediate | US Short-Term | US Muni | US Corporate | |
US Recovery | 10.74% | 10.46% | 6.19% | 10.50% | 11% |
Normal Times | 7.23% | 4.48% | 3.09% | 4.61% | 6.17% |
US Recession | 6.88% | 7.01% | 6.13% | 7.97% | 7.78% |
We found that emerging market debt does better in the first two years after a US recession than any other time period. The average emerging market debt fund outperformed by 9.33 percentage points, 18.78% vs, 9.45%, on an annualized basis during US economic recoveries compared to US recessions.
Not only did emerging market debt funds do best when the US economy was rebounding, they also outperformed all US-focused fixed-income funds during such periods. This includes even the higher-risk and most interest-rate-sensitive funds. For instance, the riskiest US long-term bond funds underperform their emerging market peers by an annualized 8.04 percentage points, 18.78% to 10.74%, during US economic expansions.
These dynamics hold for mutual funds specializing in sovereign emerging market debt. During recessions, these mutual funds delivered an average annual return of 3.15%. Of all the debt types we investigated — US, international, and emerging market — this was the lowest average return during recessions.
In periods when the United States is recovering, however, the same mutual funds have delivered an average return of 15.45% per annum — higher than any other asset class during these expansions.
With the US economy finally set to take off after a rough 2020, it may feel natural to bet on US assets in general and US-focused debt in particular. After all, why wouldn’t they stand to benefit as the domestic economy improves?
But the smart money managers may have a different perspective and be focusing their fixed-income outlook further afield, on emerging and international markets.
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All posts are the opinion of the author. As such, they should not be construed as investment advice, nor do the opinions expressed necessarily reflect the views of CFA Institute or the author’s employer.
Image credit: ©Getty Images/ Jamie Grill
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Image and article originally from blogs.cfainstitute.org. Read the original article here.