But the big risk that isn’t priced in “is policy makers potentially slowing down the stimulus,” Rochester said. Those measures have helped high-yielding assets advance despite a plethora of negative data this quarter.
Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey said in a Bloomberg Opinion article Monday that the financial system mustn’t become reliant on these extraordinary levels of reserves, with some monetary stimulus needing to be withdrawn as economies recover. Preliminary June manufacturing data from the U.K. and France signaled industry moving back into expansion mode.
The BOE last week announced it would complete its asset-purchase program around the turn of the year, which could put further pressure on financial markets. Meanwhile, Federal Reserve data showed that its balance sheet contracted 1%, the first drop since late February.
Markets may be starting to acknowledge a slower recovery, with stocks of companies that benefit from workers staying at home — such as Netflix Inc. and Amazon.com Inc — doing well on Monday, and gold prices rosing for a third day Tuesday.
“We have been taking profit,” said John Taylor, who manages $6.6 billion at AllianceBernstein in London and bought corporate bonds in April. “I wouldn’t only worry about a second wave of COVID and any reversal of lockdown, but also how the economy holds up as governments start to ease back on the support.”
The post Rising global risks could challenge market exuberance appeared first on InvestmentNews.
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