For years investors relied on a mix of stocks and bonds to manage risk in their portfolios, but times have changed.

The classic diversification of 60 per cent stocks and

40 per cent bonds

worked historically because they moved in opposite directions. When stocks fell, bonds rallied, cushioning losses.

But now instead of offsetting equity risk, bonds are increasingly moving in tandem with stocks, raising red flags at the

International Monetary Fund.

“This shift is particularly pronounced during sharp market selloffs, with profound implications for investors and policymakers alike,” said IMF authors Tobias Adrian, Johannes Kramer and Sheheryar Malik

in a recent post.

The IMF tracks the turning point for correlations between stocks and bonds to around the end of 2019. During the pandemic as inflation soared, the historical relationship shifted “significantly” with stocks and bonds selling off simultaneously more often.

Today symptoms of the breakdown can be seen in the increased severity of recent market selloffs — “losses compound when both assets fall together” — and in skyrocketing

gold and precious metal prices

, as investors seek alternative safe havens.

It has increased risk for the leveraged strategies of hedge funds and even more conservative institutional investors like pension funds and insurers.

“If diversification fails, volatility can cascade into broader financial instability,” said the IMF authors.

“Investors and policymakers must rethink risk management for a new era where traditional hedges fail.”

Concerns about bonds have grown over the past few years as supply swelled in most advanced economies looking to finance growing fiscal deficits.

Above-target inflation

heightened the risk.

The IMF said central banks could intervene to stabilize bond markets if extreme stress emerged, but there are limits. Such emergency measures can create a moral hazard which encourages excessive risk taking.

What is really needed to restore the hedging properties of government securities is fiscal discipline among nations with high debt levels, it said.

“Without credible fiscal frameworks, bonds cannot serve as reliable anchors in turbulent markets.”

Central banks can help by maintaining price stability, as the pandemic’s inflation shock was a key contributor to the reversal of the stock-bond correlations. Regulators also need to incorporate the breakdown into their stress tests.

“Financial institutions need to prepare for traditional diversification to fail, as models calibrated on historical correlations may underestimate new risks,” said the IMF.

Investors too should rethink risk and build portfolios that take the shift in correlations into account, but that can get tricky.

“Alternative strategies — such as incorporating commodities or private assets — may offer partial solutions, but they come with their own complexities and risks,” said the authors.


 Sign up here to get Posthaste delivered straight to your inbox.



Millennials

are pulling the plug on

electric vehicles.

Demand for EVs, in general, has ebbed over the past few years as gas prices fell and government subsidies expired, but, according to data compiled by Bank of America, it is especially evident among millennials.

The bank looked at auto loan originations and found that over the past two years, millennials have pulled back from EVs more than any other generation. While the data is U.S., the same conditions existed in Canada: cheaper fuel and fewer subsidies.

“Given that this group may be acutely feeling affordability pressures around housing, childcare and costs of living, it’s not too surprising that they are less inclined to take on the often-sizeable upfront payment required to buy an electric car,” said Bank of America.


 

  • Today’s Data: United States retail sales, unemployment rate, consumer credit
  • Earnings: Athabasca Oil Corp., Algonquin Power & Utilities Co., AltaGas Ltd.

 


  • How Spain became Donald Trump’s nemesis in Europe
  • Charles St-Arnaud: The K-shaped economy is real and labour is on the wrong end of it
  • Garry Marr: Why your house is still costing you, even if you’ve paid it off

Winter has a way of slowing our lives down, with tiresome shovelling, unexpected power outages and evenings spent curled up with a cup of tea by the fire. Yet while the pace of daily life may ease, our spending rarely follows suit. Between online shopping, higher heating bills, warm-weather getaways, weekends on the slopes and the inevitable repair and maintenance costs for our homes and vehicles, winter can quietly take a serious toll on our wallets. Credit counsellor Mary Castillo has some tips on how to keep spending under control when the temperature drops.

Find out more


Interested in energy? The subscriber-only FP West: Energy Insider newsletter brings you exclusive reporting and in-depth analysis on  one of the country’s most important sectors.

Sign up here.


Are you worried about having enough for retirement? Do you need to adjust your portfolio? Are you starting out or making a change and wondering how to build wealth? Are you trying to make ends meet? Drop us a line at wealth@postmedia.com with your contact info and the gist of your problem and we’ll find some experts to help you out while writing a Family Finance story about it (we’ll keep your name out of it, of course).

McLister on mortgages

Want to learn more about mortgages? Mortgage strategist Robert McLister’s

Financial Post column

can help navigate the complex sector, from the latest trends to financing opportunities you won’t want to miss. Plus check his

mortgage rate page

for Canada’s lowest national mortgage rates, updated daily.


Financial Post on YouTube

Visit the Financial Post’s

YouTube channel

for interviews with Canada’s leading experts in business, economics, housing, the energy sector and more.


Today’s Posthaste was written by Pamela Heaven with additional reporting from Financial Post staff, The Canadian Press and Bloomberg.

Have a story idea, pitch, embargoed report, or a suggestion for this newsletter? Email us at 

posthaste@postmedia.com

.


Bookmark our website and support our journalism: Don’t miss the business news you need to know — add financialpost.com to your bookmarks and sign up for our newsletters here