Investor Behind Record $2.7 Billion Bond Bet Says Recession Near

Back in June, a mystery investor made a record wager on long-dated Treasuries, creating waves in the ETF market where trading pros seek clues about sentiment on Wall Street. Now the firm behind that bet has revealed itself, and says its recession call is finally coming to fruition.

On Tuesday, Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management’s Brent Schutte said it was his company that poured $2.7 billion into BlackRock’s 20+ Year Treasury Bond exchange-traded fund (ticker TLT) on June 24, an unprecedented inflow for the largest long-bond ETF, which debuted in 2002.

Schutte, the roughly $300 billion money manager’s chief investment officer, said the plan is to hold the position across retail portfolios for at least a year, on the view that a cooling labor market will spark a recession.

His projection comes as a Treasuries rally in recent weeks vindicates his June move. Discouraging economic data and global turbulence fueled the bond gains – which have pared somewhat the past few days. The tumult, however, has cemented the view that the Federal Reserve will start lowering borrowing costs next month.

“It’s taking longer to get to a recession because of all the excesses that were pumped in the economy — the liquidity, the excess savings, the lower interest-rate environment that had allowed corporations and consumers to refinance,” Schutte said. “You’re starting to see those things wear off.”

The job market, he added, “is usually the last thing to break.”

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