Bill
Gross: Avoid bank stocks in negative interest-rate world
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[March 03, 2016]
By Jennifer Ablan
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Bill Gross, the widely
followed investor who runs the Janus Global Unconstrained Bond Fund,
said on Thursday that investors should not be tempted into purchasing
beaten-down bank stocks against the backdrop of interest rates
potentially turning negative.
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In his latest Investment Outlook report, Gross said negative yields
threaten bank profit margins as yield curves flatten worldwide and
bank net interest rate margins narrow.
"The recent collapse in worldwide bank stock prices can be explained
not so much by potential defaults in the energy/commodity complex,
as by investor recognition that banks are now not only being more
tightly regulated, but that future Return On Equity's will be much
akin to a utility stock."
Gross warned investors: "Banking/finance seems to be either a
screaming sector ready to be bought or a permanently damaged victim
of write-offs, tighter regulation and significantly lower future
margins. I'll vote for the latter."
Gross said investors should not reach for the "tantalizing apple of
high yield or the low price/book ratio of bank stocks." Those prices
are where they are because of low/negative interest rates, Gross
said.
Additionally, investors should not reach for the seemingly
momentum-driven higher prices of German bunds and U.S. Treasuries
that negative yields have produced, Gross said.
"A 30-year Treasury at 2.5 percent can wipe out your annual income
in one day with a 10 basis point increase," Gross said.
"The secret in a negative interest rate world that poses
extraordinary duration risk for AAA sovereign bonds is to No 1, keep
bond maturities short and No 2 borrow at those attractive yields in
a mildly levered form that provides a yield and expected return of
5-6 percent."
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Gross said the advice about borrowing at low yields obviously has to
be matched with investments that are less volatile and least
affected by the evolving changes of the monetary system.
"But it can be done," he said. "Closed end funds at deep discounts,
highly certain acquisition arbitrage stocks, as well as volatility
sales at tails are general examples."
(Reporting By Jennifer Ablan; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)
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