Stocks In Foreign Developed Markets Led Gainers Last Week

 | Aug 10, 2020 07:25AM ET

Shares in foreign developed-market nations topped returns last week for the major asset classes. After retreating for two weeks, this corner of global equity markets rebounded and led a wide-ranging rally in risk assets for the trading week through Aug. 7, based on a set of exchange-traded funds.

Vanguard FTSE Developed Markets (NYSE:VEA) rose 2.9% last week. The gain marks the fund’s best weekly advance since May. Despite the rally, VEA has been a relative laggard over the past three months compared with the rise in US stocks (NYSE:VTI) and shares in emerging markets (Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets Index Fund ETF Shares (NYSE:VWO).

Most of the major asset classes rose last week. The exception: foreign bonds. The worst performer for the week just passed: foreign inflation-indexed government bonds. After a run of three weekly gains, SPDR FTSE International Government Inflation-Protected Bond (NYSE:WIP) backtracked with a 0.9% loss.

The Global Markets Index (GMI.F) continued to rally last week. This unmanaged benchmark, which holds all the major asset classes (except cash) in market-value weights via ETFs, rose 1.8% — the index’s sixth consecutive weekly gain.