All Asset All Access, July 2018

SUMMARY

  • Research Affiliates believes Fed Chairman Jerome Powell will likely be sensitive to the impact of Fed policy on business and the financial system, but his potential response to an inflation shock is untested.
  • Putting real return diversifiers in place to counteract mainstream investments’ vulnerability to a potential inflation surprise seems compelling and may be prudent.
  • Research Affiliates and PIMCO have collaborated for over 15 years to create products that address key investor challenges, including vulnerability to renewed inflation prospects and inadequate diversification relative to U.S equity risk.
  • The strategies we jointly launch often benefit from multiple sources of potential return within a single fund, including the return of the asset class, the excess return of the collateral, PIMCO’s active management expertise and the benefits of Research Affiliates’ empirically tested systematic equity market insights.

Rob Arnott, founding chairman and head of Research Affiliates, discusses his optimism about Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell and why putting inflation-fighting diversifiers in place now may be prudent, while Jonathan Treussard, Research Affiliates’ head of product management, offers insight into how PIMCO and Research Affiliates collaborate to create innovative solutions that aim to meet the needs of investors. As always, their insights are in the context of the PIMCO All Asset and All Asset All Authority funds.

Q: What are your thoughts on Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, and how does this inform your positioning for a potential inflation overshoot?

Arnott: I’m heartened by Chairman Jay Powell’s private-sector background. He’s the first Fed chairman since Paul Volcker who has run a business and had to meet a payroll. This likely means less reliance on academic models, less temptation to run multi-trillion-dollar experiments and more reliance on common sense. Powell will likely be sensitive to the impact of Fed policy on business and the financial system, and – at the same time – less tempted to offer a “Powell Put.” He has mentioned simplifying areas that affect banks, such as the stress test and other rules impacting smaller banks. Might this lead to an increase in lending activity? Possibly.

Long before his confirmation as chairman in February, he earned a reputation as a bipartisan consensus builder. Notably, he has never dissented in a monetary policy vote since joining the board in May 2012 as Fed governor. Accordingly, it’s unlikely that Chairman Powell will change course from the policy normalization put in place by the Fed under Janet Yellen. For this year, Fed guidance calls for a gradual rise in rates and a concurrent, even more gradual, reduction in the balance sheet.