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Nowhere to Hide: Stocks and Bonds Suffer Losses Worse Than 2008

Nowhere to Hide: Stocks and Bonds Suffer Losses Worse Than 2008

(Bloomberg) -- The stock market’s faithful hedge failed when investors needed it the most.

As the Dow Jones Industrial Average plunged into a bear market and the S&P 500 approached that threshold with a 4.9% drop, longer-dated Treasuries were battered too, with the yield of 30-year bonds surging to 1.39% from Monday’s record low of just under 0.70%.

That produced a combined rout of 8.6% for long-dated bonds and U.S. equities on Wednesday, measured by adding the losses on BlackRock Inc.’s long-dated Treasury exchange-traded fund and the drop in the S&P 500 -- their worst combined daily drawdown since the ETF was created in 2002. For balanced portfolios, this session was worse than any during the financial crisis.

Nowhere to Hide: Stocks and Bonds Suffer Losses Worse Than 2008

Despite the rout in stocks, the haven bid in Treasuries gave way to a rush of selling, with traders scrambling to unload their most easily traded assets -- even the safest ones. The sell-off came as a shock in a market that’s been setting fresh record low yields in recent weeks.

The dual declines could indicate deleveraging among risk parity funds could be at hand, as well as the use of bonds as a source of liquidity for margin calls and redemptions.

“There was the hope that maybe if yields found some traction, the stock market would too, but now we’ve diverged again,” said Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab. “Some of that may be when there’s forced selling. You sell what you can or sell where there’s profits. People had a heck of a lot of profits from Treasuries.”

The picture is just as bleak when it comes to inflation-protected bonds, with the $22 billion iShares TIPS Bond ETF down 2.3%, extending a three-day plunge to 7%.

Since December 2003, there have only been five occasions in which the S&P 500 fell at least 4.5% and this inflation-protected bond fund declined by at least 0.5%. They were: Monday and Wednesday of this week as well as three days in 2008 -- Oct. 7, Oct. 9 and Nov. 20.

“This is a reflection of the panic/dislocation in nominal U.S. Treasuries,” said Mark Dow, founder of Dow Global Advisors. “Less liquid markets like TIPs and munis lag much more than usual when this happens.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Luke Kawa in New York at lkawa@bloomberg.net;Katherine Greifeld in New York at kgreifeld@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jeremy Herron at jherron8@bloomberg.net, Rita Nazareth, Brendan Walsh

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