A bullish bias is based
largely on Bond yields bottoming out, NOT TOPPING, along with Advance / Decline being back at new all - time highs while various former underperforming laggard sectors like Healthcare, have begun to outperform.
Not exact matches
Investors were cautious after a
largely weak performance
on Wall Street
on Thursday as some disappointing earnings reports offset strong economic data, while
bond yields slid after a surprising slowdown in eurozone inflation.
Investors were cautious after a
largely weak performance
on Wall Street overnight as some disappointing earnings reports offset strong economic data, while
bond yields slid after a surprising slowdown in euro zone inflation.
Yields on inflation - linked
bonds, at 2.7 per cent, are also
largely unchanged in net terms since early February.
The return increase from an overall decline in 20 - year US
bond yields, from a high of 14.1 % in September 1981 to 3.0 % in December 2015, may have been
largely offset by lower income
on reinvested cash flows.
But the long - term return
on a mix of stocks and
bonds is still likely to be higher than the return you'll get
on money you invest in an annuity, as annuity payouts are
largely tied to high - quality
bond yields.