INVESTMENT FOCUS-Clouds forming over top fund managers' sunny investment calls

(Repeats from Friday without changes)

* GRAPHIC: Stocks vs bond yields http://reut.rs/2uhd7By

* GRAPHIC: Global earnings growth http://reut.rs/2upAeNv

* GRAPHIC: India stock market valuations: http://tmsnrt.rs/2vG3Cvg

* GRAPHIC: Global Fixed Income http://tmsnrt.rs/2udfDsB

By Saikat Chatterjee and Kit Rees

LONDON, July 21 (Reuters) - Stock prices climbing ever higher as interest rates and volatility plumb rock bottom: for some of the world's top asset managers, the investment outlook is as good as it gets.

But look closer and clouds are forming that may put a dampener on this sunny outlook. Investors should beware a rise in bond yields, a downturn in economic data or a policy misstep in a large emerging market.

As the big money managers outline their recommendations for the rest of 2017, several have highlighted stocks and local currency emerging market debt as likely winners.

The reasons aren't difficult to find.

A collapse in market volatility to record lows across currencies, fixed income and equities means carry trade strategies, in which investors borrow in a low-yielding currency to invest in a higher-yielding one, have proven very rewarding.

The JPMorgan emerging market currency index is up more than 8.5 percent this year, on track for its best yearly performance since 2010, according to Thomson Reuters data.

A structural decline in inflation despite years of monetary stimulus pursued by the world's biggest central banks has also meant that holding cash or government bonds would actually leach money from portfolios.

Strategists at Bank of America Merrill Lynch estimate inflation is rising in only 11 percent of developed markets compared with 72 percent in February.

Small wonder that some investors believe these may be the best conditions to buy equities as the biggest industrialised economies are enjoying low but persistent growth, near full-employment and declining inflation.

EARNINGS

A favourite chart with investment houses is the growing premium offered by earnings yields over bond yields. At a chunky 6 percent, it suggests investors would do well to buy stocks.

With earnings recovering and interest rates at record lows, Blackrock strategists say they see "less reason" to expect equity valuation metrics to fall back to historical means in such a world.

But portfolio managers such as Julian Chillingworth, CIO of Rathbone Unit Trust Management, say substantial flows into European stocks from exchange-traded funds and passive investors have pushed valuations to a point where they are beginning to look a bit stretched.