Watching Stock and Bond Correlations in 2023

 | Dec 26, 2022 06:45AM ET

  • As stocks sink back toward the October lows, yields are not quite as high as they once were
  • Inflation concerns are progressing toward recession fears, which may cause a divergence in the performance between equities and Treasury bonds
  • The diversification benefits of a classic 60/40 allocation should work better in a lower-inflation regime next year
  • A major investing theme that impacts short-term and long-term investors alike was a frustrating lockstep movement between the S&P 500 and Treasury bonds in 2022.

    It used to be that owning a portfolio of bonds, mainly default-risk-free T-notes and the ‘long bond’, would help buffer against volatility in equities.

    That wasn’t the case in 2022, as stocks often fell when interest rates rose. Hot CPI reports, hawkish Fed statements, stubbornly high consumer spending, and nominal wages sent the bond market into a tizzy time after time.

    Recently, though, the ‘40’ part of many folks’ portfolios has once again offered some relief from volatile and downward-trending stocks at times. Is that a near-term blip or theme that could persist?

    The chart below illustrates that US equities and government fixed income are diverging ever so slightly in performance.