Gross: QE and financial repression have failed
PIMCO’s bond star looks at the 'real economy' of the US and why despite its failure the 'era of financial repression' is set to continue.
Markets
by Atholl Simpson on Nov 01, 2012 at 13:43
‘If monetary policy has shown its impotent limits, can we now trust Washington to constructively reverse a downward slide in our net national savings rate?’
‘I suspect not. I doubt if either Obama, Romney, or many of their economic advisors even know what the definition is, let alone how to reverse it.’
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If real economic growth is stunted in the US and globally, said Gross, then portfolio strategies should acknowledge bite-sized future returns and the growing risk that the negative consequences of misguided monetary and fiscal policy might lead to disruptive financial markets at some future point.
‘Although PIMCO expects a middle ground fiscal compromise from Washington, when that is combined with the fading influence of QE monetary policies, it leads only temporarily to 2% real growth in the US at best – growth that is clearly not “Old Normal.”’
‘We are in a “New Normal” world where the negative effects of private sector deleveraging are only being weakly addressed by monetary and fiscal authorities.’
‘If so, then Treasury yields should stay low,’ he said, adding that money market funds will also continue to deliver historically low interest yields.
‘The “cult” of equity – or better yet the cult of “total return” – for both bonds and stocks – is over, if that definition presumes a resumption of historical patterns anywhere close to double digits.’
‘The era of financial repression continues.’
The full Bill Gross Investment Outlook can be read here.
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2 comments so far. Why not have your say?
Banged to Rights
Nov 01, 2012 at 22:40
QE the low IQ policy.
report thisJohn Stirling
Nov 02, 2012 at 09:47
What was the alternative? Politically or economically? Once you have opened Pandora's box, let the genie of financial destruction out of the regulatory bottle, and whipped up the whirlwind all at the same time the historical answer would be a good solid war, millions dead, and a currency reboot.
I am quite pleased that our political leaders have tried a new approach - QE may be largely ineffective, and not have any obviously acceptable way around its rather glaring problems, but if we can get away with a decade of significant but not catastrophic economic woes and inflation then I'll consider it a win. Anything better than that would be a miracle.
It is easy to criticise the policy response to where we were - it was a rubbish response in many ways - but it is more difficult to come up with an alternative that is not only acceptable economically, but is credible when you look at how people have reacted throughout history.
Crashes happen, recoveries happen, bubbles happen, rinse and repeat. Even the mighty Bill Gross only criticises without saying what should have been done differently.
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