Werbung
Deutsche Märkte geschlossen
  • DAX

    18.161,01
    +243,73 (+1,36%)
     
  • Euro Stoxx 50

    5.006,85
    +67,84 (+1,37%)
     
  • Dow Jones 30

    38.239,66
    +153,86 (+0,40%)
     
  • Gold

    2.349,60
    +7,10 (+0,30%)
     
  • EUR/USD

    1,0699
    -0,0034 (-0,32%)
     
  • Bitcoin EUR

    59.650,75
    -744,58 (-1,23%)
     
  • CMC Crypto 200

    1.328,25
    -68,29 (-4,89%)
     
  • Öl (Brent)

    83,66
    +0,09 (+0,11%)
     
  • MDAX

    26.175,48
    +132,30 (+0,51%)
     
  • TecDAX

    3.322,49
    +55,73 (+1,71%)
     
  • SDAX

    14.256,34
    +260,57 (+1,86%)
     
  • Nikkei 225

    37.934,76
    +306,28 (+0,81%)
     
  • FTSE 100

    8.139,83
    +60,97 (+0,75%)
     
  • CAC 40

    8.088,24
    +71,59 (+0,89%)
     
  • Nasdaq Compositive

    15.927,90
    +316,14 (+2,03%)
     

TOM LEE: Stocks are the new bonds

One of Wall Street's most bullish stock-market strategists has given clients another reason to buy more stocks in 2016.

For Fundstrat's Tom Lee, the higher yield investors can get from stocks instead of bonds is another reason to own equities, besides the built-in upside potential for stocks he projects.

And so, in 2016, stocks are the "new bonds", according to Lee in a note on Friday. His 2015 year-end target for the S&P 500 is 2,325.

He wrote, "Equity valuations are also finding support from dividends. The drop in equity prices has pushed dividend yields to over 2.2%, and given the current 10Y yield of 2.23%, means equities are now yielding essentially the same as 10Y bonds. In fact, this yield is even greater when taking into account the differences in taxation."

WERBUNG

The chart below illustrates that the gap between dividend yields and the treasury 10-year yield has been widening.

Screen Shot 2015 11 20 at 8.19.28 AM
Screen Shot 2015 11 20 at 8.19.28 AM

(Fundstrat)

Lee used Walmart as an example of a company whose stock-dividend yield is paying more than its own bond yield.

As an AA-rated issuer, the company is paying a yield of 2.7% on the long-term debt, lower than the stock's yield of 3.2%.

Lee wrote that this means "the equity pays a yield 49bp higher than the AA-rated bonds — does this make any sense?"

Screen Shot 2015 11 20 at 8.14.16 AM
Screen Shot 2015 11 20 at 8.14.16 AM

(Fundstrat)

Lee noted that there are 130 companies on the S&P 500 whose dividend yield is higher than their long-term bond yields. Most of them are in the financials, utilities, energy and industrials sectors, and have have credit that's BBB- to A-rated.

Besides Walmart, others include Coca-Cola, Target, and Pfizer.

And if it happens that stocks get even cheaper, Lee says companies would salvage this by buying back their own shares.

NOW WATCH: How a successful investment banker used insider information to bankroll his mistress and child



More From Business Insider