Can you beat rising interest rates?

By Jessica Bruno | March 13, 2014 | Last updated on March 13, 2014
1 min read

Historically, rising interest rates have depressed markets.

But when rates are hiked, your clients will still have options, says Phil Davidson, CIO of U.S. Value Equity at American Century Investments. He co-manages the Renaissance U.S. Equity Income Fund.

Equity returns may be dampened, he adds, but you can help people protect their portfolios by focusing on high-quality stocks and bonds.

Read: Tap high-yield assets as rates rise

Davidson notes that some lower-quality companies have outperformed over the past five years. Yet, these businesses will be squeezed when interest rates rise since they’ll face higher expenses and reduced access to capital.

Already, higher quality stocks and bonds have gained popularity since the U.S. Federal Reserve announced tapering plans. The shift is occurring, says Davidson, since people realize that “a rising rate environment [will] make it increasingly difficult for companies…to borrow money…without feeling the impact of increased costs.”

Also, the “widening [of] quality spreads in the debt market [can] flow through to [the] equity performance” of companies that are struggling.

Read: Prepare clients for interest rate hikes

It’s important to start helping clients since markets were weaker in January, says Davidson. He finds people are becoming less optimistic about “the earnings outlook [for 2014] and the macro environment.”

For more tips, read:

Canadians unprepared for rising interest rates

Equity run isn’t done

3 tips to help clients manage money

Navigate turbulent markets

How to structure drawdown portfolios

2 ways to reduce interest rate risk

Jessica Bruno