Solid jobs report to keep
Fed in 'hike-once-a-quarter mindset': Gundlach
Send a link to a friend
[July 08, 2017]
By Jennifer Ablan
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Solid payroll figures
in June should keep the U.S. Federal Reserve in a "hike-once-a-quarter
mindset," said influential bond manager Jeffrey Gundlach, chief
executive of DoubleLine Capital, on Friday.
Nonfarm payrolls jumped by 222,000 jobs last month, driven by hefty
gains in healthcare, government, restaurants and the professional and
business services sectors, the Labor Department said on Friday. It was
the second biggest payrolls increase this year and beat economists'
expectations for a 179,000 rise.
“It’s a good run-of-the-mill jobs report,” Gundlach said in a telephone
interview. Gundlach, known on Wall Street as the "Bond King," said the
payrolls report will keep the U.S. central bank in a tightening mode.
“It’s not ‘old school’ sequential tightening when the Fed hiked at every
meeting until something breaks,” such as a U.S. recession, Gundlach
said. “What we have now is the ‘new old school’ sequential tightening.”
Gundlach, who oversees more than $109 billion in assets under management
at Los Angeles-based DoubleLine, said it appears as though the Federal
Reserve has been paying attention to record stock prices.
“I think the Fed is emboldened to hike when the stock market is pushing
near highs and when there is a sense or whiff of panic in the air, they
start to talk cautiously.”
Friday, the Fed said in its semiannual report to Congress that
vulnerabilities in the U.S. financial system "remained, on balance,
moderate."
[to top of second column] |
Jeffrey Gundlach, CEO of DoubleLine Capital, speaks during the Sohn
Investment Conference in New York City, U.S., May 8, 2017.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Gundlach said the Fed was "getting awfully specific" on asset prices in its
semiannual report. "It almost sounds like they are saying, 'I warned you and
don't blame us.' I told you we were going to do this (hike rates) and asset
prices are going down. If stocks go down 10 percent in October, don’t blame us."
The Fed's report stated that forward equity price-to-earnings ratios rose a bit
further and are now at their highest levels since the early 2000s, while a
measure of the risk premium embedded in high-yield corporate bond spreads
declined a touch from an already low level, implying high asset valuations in
the market as well. (http://bit.ly/2sP7Rb5)
"Prices of CRE (Commercial Real Estate) have continued to advance at a rapid
clip amid slowing rent growth and rising interest rates, though there are signs
of tightening credit conditions in CRE markets," the Fed said. "In derivatives
markets, investor compensation for bearing near-term volatility risk has
remained low, suggesting a sustained investor risk appetite."
(Reporting by Jennifer Ablan; Editing by Tom Brown and Lisa Shumaker)
[© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2017 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|