Trump Trades Are Upended as Treasury Returns Beat US Stocks

US Treasuries are now outperforming stocks since Donald Trump was elected President, and some strategists say there’s room for those gains to run.

A Bloomberg gauge of US sovereign debt has returned 2.1% since the Nov. 5 vote, beating a gain of 1.6% from the S&P 500 Index including reinvested dividends. While long-end Treasuries declined on Tuesday after Trump imposed new 25% trade tariffs on Canada to Mexico, the prospect of further Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts is seen giving bonds a further tailwind.

Stocks meanwhile are being sold as the outlook for global growth worsens, and also due to concern market leaders such as Nvidia Corp. are overvalued. Taken together these moves are the opposite of the so-called “Trump trade,” which favors rising equities and higher Treasury yields.

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“It’s easy to see the Fed cutting 50, 100, 150 basis points this year, but tough – if not impossible – to see them tightening by the same magnitude,” said Michael Brown, senior research strategist at Pepperstone Group Ltd. in London. “Sprinkle a growth scare on top, and there’s your bull case in a nutshell” for bonds, he said.

Treasury 10-year yields fell to a four-month low of 4.11% Tuesday before erasing the move and edging higher. The US economy, long lauded for its outperformance, is showing cracks with factory activity edging closer to stagnation in February — bolstering the appeal of fixed-income assets.

“The ‘US exceptionalism’ narrative – a driver of macro markets for well over a year – faces an increasingly uphill battle, given risks to growth on both sides of the Atlantic,” Morgan Stanley strategists including Matthew Hornbach wrote in a note. “We think US Treasuries will benefit the most from a rethink of the narrative.”