The Man Who Called The Last Bond Bear Market 40 Years Ago Says “Buy Bonds”

74-year-old bond guru Lacy Hunt is among a rare breed in finance today: people who actually traded during a period when bonds continuously lost value. As a young bond manager coming of age during the Great Inflation and Richard Nixon’s wage and price controls, Bloomberg reports that Hunt saw the bear market in bonds coming in the late 1970s, and made a fortune for his clients. Today, as hints of inflation start to bubble and calling the next bear market becomes the industry’s favorite pastime, Hunt says no, "I’m still long bonds, especially the long-end."

Hoisington Investment Management’s Hunt shrugs it off and says “it’s just more of the same.”

Using an out of fashion metric known as the velocity of money, the Austin, Texas-based economist says he’s convinced the rout since the election of Donald Trump is just a bump in the road for an extended rally.

The velocity is the rate at which money circulates in the economy and is usually measured as a ratio of nominal gross domestic product over the total supply. In other words, it measures how well an economy is able to generate transactions, and in turn growth, with an incremental increase of money in the financial system.

The problem is money velocity in the U.S. (as measured by M2) has fallen to a record-low of 1.44, meaning every dollar spent circulates only 1.44 times in the economy, down from over 2 times at the peak in 1997. To Hunt and other adherents, that shows even after years of unprecedented money printing by the Federal Reserve, inflation will remain subdued and elusive, largely because the private sector has chosen to hoard, and not spend, the money in the years after the financial crisis.

 "When debt is at high levels and increasingly counterproductive, the most important lesson of economic history is that the velocity of money falls," said Hunt said, who helps manage $3.6 billion in assets.

 

"I’m still long bonds, especially the long-end," the part of the yield curve that’s the most sensitive to rising inflation.

 

The $308 million Wasatch-Hoisington U.S. Treasury fund gives reason to listen to Hunt. The fund has outperformed over 90 percent of its peers in the past three and five years, and has returned 1.7 percent this year.

As Bloomberg notes, however, Hunt isn’t the only one seeing the record-low pace as an ominous sign.

The fact that money velocity declined rapidly during years of near-zero interest rates may signal aggressive monetary easing actually led to deflation instead of inflation, economists at the St. Louis Fed wrote back in 2014.

 

"In this regard, the unconventional monetary policy has reinforced the recession by stimulating the private sector’s money demand through pursuing an excessively low interest rate policy," economists Yi Wen and Maria A. Arias wrote.

 

"I know I’m the minority here,” Hunt said. “I’m just trying to see the world as I think it should be seen.”

And bearing in mind that the world and their pet rabbit is short Treasuries..

Hunt may be more right than he knows.

via http://ift.tt/2j3hSdW Tyler Durden

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