Monthly Market Monitor: February 2013 Market Indices1 | February | Year-to-Date | S&P 500 | +1.36% | +6.61% | Russell 3000 | +1.33% | +6.89% | MSCI EAFE | -0.92% | +4.32% | MSCI Emerging Markets | -1.24% | +0.13% | Barclays US Aggregate Bond | +0.50% | -0.20% | Barclays Municipal | +0.30% | +0.72% | Barclays US Corporate High Yield | +0.51% | +1.86% | 1 Morningstar Direct (all performance percentages are total return based, which include reinvested dividend, interest)U.S. stocks extended year-to-date gains into a second month, as investors remained encouraged over better-than-expected corporate earnings despite a slowdown in global growth. February was marked by inconclusive election results in Italy that reignited European debt crisis concerns and U.S. political gridlock that ushered in the so-called “sequestration” federal spending cuts. Slated to begin after midnight March 1st, the across-the-board cuts will total $1.2 trillion over nine years, with $85B over the remaining seven months of this fiscal year. After reaching a fresh five-year high of 1,530 on February 19th, the S&P 500 returned 1.4% on the month, including dividends, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average outperformed with a 1.8% return. The technology-focused NASDAQ Composite lagged with a 0.8% gain.
Small-cap stocks underperformed large-caps as the Russell 2000, a proxy for small-cap equities, returned 1.1% in February. Value stocks edged out their growth counterparts as the Russell 1000 Value Index gained 1.4% last month whereas the Russell 1000 Growth Index returned 1.2%. In a stark turnaround, commodities, as measured by the S&P GSCI Index, fell 4.4% last month after gaining 4.5% in January. In particular, gold futures dropped 5% in February and nearly 6% YTD. Silver fared even worse, falling 9.3% on the month. Crude oil futures retreated 6% in February, the first monthly decline since October.
Nine of the ten S&P 500 sector groups advanced on the month, led by gains in Consumer Staples (+3.2%), Telecom (+2.6%) and Industrials (+2.5%). Energy (+0.4%) gained the least, while Materials fell 1.5%. For the year, all ten S&P sectors are in positive territory with Consumer Staples (+9.2%) and Healthcare (+8.8%) the top performers. The Technology sector has gained the least so far this year, up 2.1%.
Overseas developed markets underperformed the U.S. as the MSCI EAFE Index fell 0.9% in February. China’s Shanghai Composite fell 0.8% for the month, its first monthly decline since November. Emerging markets also underperformed in February, as the MSCI Emerging Markets Index fell 1.2%, its worst month since May.
U.S. Treasury 10-year note yields seesawed during the month ending at 1.88%, over 11 basis points lower than January’s month end. Treasuries, as measured by the Barclays U.S. Government Bond Index, reversed their January losses, returning 0.5% in February. U.S. investment grade bonds also gained 0.5% in February, as measured by the Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index. Municipal bonds, as measured by the Barclays Municipals Index, returned 0.3% in February. Non-investment-grade corporate bonds posted a 0.5% monthly return, as measured by the Barclays U.S. Corporate High Yield Index.
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