Last Week’s Trading Marks A Weak Start For 2016

 | Jan 11, 2016 06:55AM ET

The year began with a thud for most of the major asset classes, based on total returns for a set of proxy ETFs. Investment-grade US bonds edged higher in the first five trading days through January 8. Thanks in part to a slightly weaker dollar last week, foreign government bonds in developed markets and foreign junk advanced slightly as well. But the red ink was otherwise dominant.

The big loser last week: emerging market equities (N:VWO), which tumbled more than 8%. Heightened worries about China’s slowing economy is a factor that continues to reverberate with negative implications for the global marketplace. With a nod to the potential spillover effects, the setback in the kickoff to 2016 was nearly as deep for foreign stocks in developed markets, which shed more than 6%.

Nonetheless, the World Bank last week projected that global economic growth will improve to 2.9% this year from 2.4% in 2015 “as advanced economies gain speed.” But the “anemic recovery” in emerging markets will remain a headwind, the bank advised. “Spillovers from major emerging markets will constrain growth in developing countries and pose a threat to hard-won gains in raising people out of poverty.”