EDITOR'S NOTE
The S&P 500 hit another record high Thursday, but trading remained muted with all eyes on Friday's jobs report. It will likely be a key market-moving event with investors trying to decipher how fast the Federal Reserve will remove easy monetary policy.
"We could experience a bit of a tug and a pull — on one hand a solid jobs report is a positive indication of economic recovery, and on the other it backs up the Fed's case to begin tapering," said Mike Loewengart, managing director of investment strategy at E-Trade. When the eventual time comes for the Fed to taper, many on Wall Street expect bond yields to go higher, including Bill Gross, the onetime bond king who co-founded fixed income giant Pimco.
In fact, the 77-year-old investor said the rise in long-term bond yields will erode the asset's value so significantly that it would be as useless as cash. Bond yields move inversely with prices.
"Cash has been trash for a long time but there are now new contenders for the investment garbage can," Gross wrote in a blog post. "Intermediate to long-term bond funds are in that trash receptacle for sure, but will stocks follow?"
Gross predicted the 10-year Treasury yield will trade around 2% for the next 12 months, which will equate to a 4% to 5% price loss and a negative total return of 2.5% to 3%. TOP NEWS
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Kamis, 02 September 2021
S&P 500 keeping momentum into September | Big jobs Friday | Chip shortages hit auto industry
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