BlackRock's Rieder buying longer-term bonds as Fed pause
seems likely
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[December 07, 2018]
By Trevor Hunnicutt
NEW YORK (Reuters) - BlackRock Inc's <BLK.N>
Rick Rieder is buying longer-term bonds because softening inflation
could force the U.S. Federal Reserve to pause interest rate hikes, the
top fixed-income investor told Reuters this week.
Rieder, who is chief investment officer of global fixed income for the
world's largest fund manager, said inflation could be declining from
current levels.
"People keep waiting for the bogeyman coming in terms of inflation, and
they're going to have to wait a long time," Rieder said on Wednesday.
"Why not pause?"
BlackRock manages $6.4 trillion in assets, with nearly a third of that
in fixed income.
Over the past three weeks, Rieder has been buying longer-term bonds,
particularly Treasuries coming due in 5 years, but also those due as far
in the future as 30 years.
Earlier this year, Rieder had been selling long bonds, citing
uncertainty around Fed policy.
Now, he says, the picture is clearer.
Markets, bracing for an economic slowdown possible by 2020, are pushing
back against three years of Fed rate hikes aimed at restoring policy to
normal footing a decade after the 2007-2009 global financial crisis.
Strong buying pushed 30-year U.S. yields <US30YT=RR> to 3.12 percent on
Thursday, from highs this month above 3.3. The benchmark S&P 500 <.SPX>
stock index is down 2.2 percent over the same period, including
dividends.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said on Nov. 28 policy rates are "just below"
estimates of a level that neither brakes nor boosts a healthy U.S.
economy.
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Rick Rieder, BlackRock's Global Chief Investment Officer, speaks
during the Reuters Global Investment Outlook Summit in New York
City, U.S., November 14, 2016. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Markets assign an overwhelming probability that there will be two hikes
at most between now and the end of 2019. Rieder in September predicted
the Fed would raise rates only twice or so in 2019. At the time markets
priced in a better-than-even chance that the Fed would move three times
or more.
Investors await a U.S. jobs report on Friday that will shed light on
wage inflation.
But inflation is unlikely, Rieder said, as consumers fail to purchase
big-ticket items. Housing and other interest rate-sensitive sectors,
meanwhile, are reeling from rate hikes.
The Fed is also shrinking its cache of bonds bought after the financial
crisis to spur lending and investment.
Partly as a result of that, global market liquidity is set to shrink
compared to the prior year for the first time since the crisis,
BlackRock estimates show.
Indeed, investors should expect more volatility, Rieder said.
"People are underestimating the amount of liquidity that's being drained
from the system."
(Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Jennifer Ablan and Bernadette
Baum)
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