I saw the report earlier and
@Ted posted recent about the outflow of monies from high yield bonds; well okay, but.....
Okay, so the second biggest money outflow on record from high yield is probably worth some type of note in the financial press; but it tis a small percentage number in the "move".
Here are more details on fund flows from a current report:
First IG bond fund redemptions in 60 weeks ($2.0bn)
HY bond redemptions second highest on record ($10.9bn)
Largest EM debt outflows for 64 weeks ($2.9bn)
Modest muni fund outflows ($0.7bn)
Strong govt/Tsy fund inflows continue ($2.4bn)
Tiny TIPS inflows ($0.01bn)
Small bank loan fund outflows ($0.2bn)
Based upon the reported numbers above and the reported dollar value of high yield bonds in the U.S. from Forbes being at $1.3 trillion;
the percentage change of the HY money outflow = .85% .I'll use this example of percentage moves that "could" provide the same headlines, but you will not likely ever see a mention:
The U.S. 10 year note yield moves from 2% to 2.05% during a trading day. This is a 2.5% move. Ya won't see this reported, eh?
Anyway, always pay attention to how numbers are crunched. Yes, even small moves may be of value to monitor and other aspects may be causing traders in any market to adjust. What is the overall trend in any market sector and what do you feel is the reason?
These dollar values do not necessarily have any real value in the big picture. This would not be unlike my smile when I see a truck commercial on tv indicating a price drop or rebate or whatever they choose to phrase being at $10,000 of the MSRP. Okay, so what; in 1970 one could buy 3 fully loaded Chevy Impalas for about $10,000. We need reference points, yes???
No, we investors do not "play" in either a fair or concise world of money.
E.O.R. (end of rant)
Have a good remainder
Catch
Comments
Regards,
Ted
Regards,
Ted
Regards,
Ted
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-02-16/selloff-spreads-to-company-debt?srnd=fixedincome
ARTFX is a fund I track for purposes of "looking" at this area. Tis a well managed HY fund.
In the HY sector, and not being a trader; I personally would only invest in active managed funds. HYG and JNK usually do not keep pace because of other internal holdings.
A quick 1 year chart for a view.....the link indicates the chosen compares:
http://stockcharts.com/freecharts/perf.php?HYG,JNK,ARTFX,SPHIX&p=5&O=011000
As to MRCDX. It does have a "high" yield, but I suspect this is due to yield rates of the corporate investments. International rates/yields are quite a bit higher than the U.S.
As usual, your stockcharts chart does not come through on my computer. But, I also looked at 1 year in M* so I got the picture.
@Ted
My definition of high yield is <BBB. Here is the latest composition info from Matthews (see Portfolio Breakdown %/Quality Distribution):
BBB- 3.7
BB+ 4.2
BB 4.5
BB- 12.9
B+ 15.1
B 14.5
B- 3.5
Not Rated 29.1
I could alway be reading something incorrectly but it sure quacks like high yield to me!
See: https://matthewsasia.com/our-funds/f-32/matthews-asia-credit-opportunities-fund/investor/composition.fs#PortfolioBreakdown
Also, here is an excerpt from the Outlook section of the latest commentary that suggests high yield is central to their current thinking:
"In our view, Asia high yield bonds look reasonably valued, while U.S. and European high yield bonds appear overvalued. Credit spreads for Asia high yield bonds are near historic averages. In contrast, spreads for U.S. high yield bonds are about 200 basis points (2.0%) below average while spreads for European high yield bonds are 300 basis points (3.0%) below average. In simple terms, Asia high yield bonds are compensating investors for taking credit risk, in our view, while U.S. and European high yield bonds are not."
https://matthewsasia.com/our-funds/f-32/matthews-asia-credit-opportunities-fund/investor/commentary.fs
T. Kong's rollout communication emphasized U.S. dollar-denominated non-IG Asian issues, and that's been the main emphasis ever since. Currency weighting reported on the current fact sheet is 79% U.S.$ and 9% Chi renminbi (12% cash).
I own her other fund, MAINX, but check in on MCRDX every so often too. She's a good manager.