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Thursday, April 1, 2010

March 2010 Recap

Equity markets finished the fourth quarter strong, as market participants celebrated the Federal Reserve’s commitment to keeping exceptionally low rates in place for “an extended period.”

Economic data was mixed throughout March. Investors were excited early in the month by February’s labor report, which showed payrolls dropped less-than-expected. The strength of the labor market is widely considered the key factor determining the pace of household spending. The jobs situation is lagging previous recoveries, though, and may be weighing on consumers, which was evident with the preliminary consumer sentiment index contracting.

Weak housing starts and softening home price indicators dampened sentiment a bit, but also provided additional reasons for the Fed to keep interest rates at emergency levels. Low inflationary indicators also supported accommodative policy, with consumer prices remaining flat month-over-month and capacity utilization well below its long-term average.

Inflation remains a concern in the future and the Fed is walking a tightrope with its exit plan, but equity markets appear content with the Fed’s direction for now.

All equity asset classes moved higher in March, led by domestic REITs. REITs continue to benefit from merger and acquisition activity, headlined by the bidding for General Growth Properties, which filed for the biggest real-estate bankruptcy in U.S. history.

Small cap stocks outperformed their larger counterparts. This is somewhat surprising given the fact that credit is still relatively tight for small caps. Smaller businesses are also more likely to be affected by the healthcare legislation passed by Congress in March.

Speaking of healthcare legislation, hospitals and drugmakers appear to be the biggest winners as they pick up a glut of new paying customers. Meanwhile the insurance industry is coming out of all this relatively unscathed. In the end, the most controversial proposals – a government-run insurance option and direct government negotiation on drug prices for Medicare – were eliminated from the bill.

In overseas markets, concerns about Greece eased as the bailout of the debt-ridden country gained clarity. Despite nice gains in March, international markets have underperformed the S&P 500 in 2010, with performance for U.S. investors in many developed markets hurt by the relative strength of the U.S. dollar.

Treasury yields rose to their highest levels since late last year as investor’s appetite for risk improved following last month’s volatility in the credit markets. After a bout of flattening at the beginning of the month, the curve steepened back up to finish where it started at 280 basis points spread between the 2-year and the 10-year, just 11 basis points shy of its all time high of 291 set on February 22. The Barclays Aggregate Bond Index was down 0.12 percent for the month, with corporate debt being the best performing sector in the index.

A lot was written this past month on the end of the “Greatest Bull Market in Bonds Ever,” with many analysts calling March 2010 the beginning of the next rate cycle. A rising rate environment will hurt longer-term bonds significantly more than shorter-term bonds; given our bias toward the shorter-end of the curve, we consider our portfolios well positioned to weather such an environment. The majority of bonds we hold will allow us to reinvest more quickly than if we were to buy longer-term debt and take advantage of higher yields.

Peter Lazaroff, Investment Analyst
Cliff Reynolds, Investment Anlayst

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