Friday, April 27, 2007

Why the equity market is still the best play

Over long periods of time, nobody can argue that the equity markets always return higher yields then the bond market. Bonds are used because of their safety, but I would argue that anyone planning on investing over a 10-year period or more should just as well invest in stocks. Some argue, however, that high short-term yields present an adequate substitute for equities.

When you examine the current T-Bill yields, you find them extremely low. So what purpose would that give to invest in bonds? Looking at outside factors, you would realize that the USD has started to take back gains against the Yen, Euro and Pound. If you couple the gains in the Dollar with record high tax revenues, which in turn help decrease the deficit in the budget, Bonds would seem attractive because yields would continue to increase. However, as my fellow blogger Rufus quickly corrected himself, he explained, "Of course, the second act is the market explodes, again and the "bond" holders take a bath."

Therefore, even if the bond market rallies in the coming few months and stalls the equity boom, eventually the stock market will pull through and continue to mount significant gains. Some will argue that the spread between bond yields and commodities is too vast and one or the other will increase or decrease, respectively. With inflationary pressure in the market beginning to wane, the odds are against a momentus rally in the fixed-income market. From this, you can predict that commodity prices will slide some, although with global growth and demand as strong as it is, a larger then normal spread is not all that worrysome.

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