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Re: Stocks $3.7 Trillion Year Beats Bonds Most Ever on Funds

By: killthecat in FFFT | Recommend this post (0)
Mon, 30 Dec 13 7:29 PM | 47 view(s)
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Msg. 59476 of 65535
(This msg. is a reply to 59475 by clo)

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If you combined bonds with Latin American stocks, like KTC did, you really made a killing.




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Stocks $3.7 Trillion Year Beats Bonds Most Ever on Funds
By: clo
in FFFT
Mon, 30 Dec 13 5:25 PM
Msg. 59475 of 65535

Stocks $3.7 Trillion Year Beats Bonds Most Ever on Funds

By Lu Wang and Whitney Kisling Dec 30, 2013 3:58 AM ET

Five years after the equity bull market started, U.S. investors returned to stocks in 2013, just in time for the best relative returns versus bonds on record.

Exchange-traded and mutual funds investing in shares took in about $162 billion, the most since 2000, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and the Investment Company Institute. At the same time, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index (SPX) climbed 29 percent, beating government debt by 32 percentage points, the widest spread since at least 1978, according to data compiled by Bank of America Merrill Lynch and Bloomberg.

Companies in the S&P 500 are worth $3.7 trillion more today than they were 12 months ago following a year when Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled the curtailment of economic stimulus. The bull market, born at the depths of the credit crisis, enters its sixth year fueled by zero-percent interest rates and conviction among investors that it’s finally safe to own stock again.

“The equity culture is not dead,” Joseph Quinlan, the chief market strategist at Bank of America Corp.’s U.S. Trust, said in a Dec. 13 phone interview from New York. His firm oversees $333 billion in client assets. “We kind of lost sight of the fact that equities still provide long-term good returns.”

The biggest rally since the 1990s is pulling annual gains back toward historical averages after the credit crisis wiped out $11 trillion in total U.S. market value. Everyone from Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Tony Crescenzi to MacroMarkets LLC’s Robert Shiller observed in 2009 that investors were no richer then than they were a decade earlier.

S&P 500 futures expiring in March were little changed at 8:55 a.m. in London today.

more:
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-12-30/stocks-3-7-trillion-year-beats-bonds-most-ever-as-funds-revive.html


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