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GM96: The End of the Hedge: When Bonds Stop Protecting Portfolios
11th February 2026 • Top Traders Unplugged • Niels Kaastrup-Larsen
00:00:00 01:01:05

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A familiar portfolio map is being redrawn. Ian Harnett traces the regime shift from disinflation and reliable bond hedges to a world where inflation pressures linger, supply chains shorten, and capital becomes a policy tool. The conversation moves from China’s exported deflation to Europe’s structural constraints, then into America’s strategy of attracting investment with tariff leverage. Beneath it all sits a political question: what happens if the governing coalition fractures ahead of the midterms. Harnett argues that is the moment the dollar turns from anchor to risk.

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Episode TimeStamps:

00:00 - The gray swan: political fracture and the point to sell the dollar

00:37 - Show intro and risk disclaimer

01:33 - Setting the frame: global macro, geopolitics, and regime change

04:34 - The new regime: inflation risk and the stock-bond relationship breaking

06:39 - Structural inflation drivers: deglobalization, trade weaponization, China’s deflation export

09:14 - Capital as a battleground: surcharges, controls, and Europe’s capital markets problem

12:02 - Europe’s catalyst problem: why it may take a crisis to build a true safe asset

14:44 - America’s playbook: inbound capital, tariff bargaining, and “neo-royalism”

18:32 - Trump-era economic ideology: the coalition, “333,” and running the economy hot

23:06 - The Fed under Warsh: rates, QT, balance sheet politics, and liquidity consequences

28:21 - Portfolio reality: slow rotation, hidden tech exposure, and where diversification breaks

41:22 - Gold, reserves, and the end of inflation targeting as a defining shift

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Transcripts

Ian:

That four way coalition that I outlined starts to fracture very dramatically and at that point I really would be selling the dollar.

That is going to be the point at which you'll say, well, hang on a minute, this is just there's a lot of rogue elements here and unless there was something that materialized to stabilize the ship very dramatically. So that to me seems to be one of the biggest gray swans out there.

Intro:

Imagine spending an hour with the world's greatest traders. Imagine learning from their experiences, their successes and their failures. Imagine no more.

Welcome to Top Traders Unplugged, the place where you can learn from the best hedge fund managers in the world so you can take your manager due diligence or investment career to the next level.

Before we begin today's conversation, remember to keep two things in all the discussion we'll have about investment performance is about the past and past performance does not guarantee or even infer anything about future performance.

Also understand that there's a significant risk of financial loss with all investment strategies and you need to request and understand the specific risks from the investment manager about their product before you make investment decisions. Here's your host, veteran hedge fund manager Niels Kaastrup-Larsen.

Niels:

Welcome and welcome back to another conversation in our series of episodes that focuses on markets and investing from a global macro perspective.

This is a series that I not only find incredibly interesting as well as intellectually challenging, but also very important given where we are in the global economy and the geopolitical cycle.

We want to dig deep into the minds of some of the most prominent experts to help us better understand what this new global macro driven world may look like. We want to explore their perspectives on a host of game changing issues and hopefully dig out nuances in their work through meaningful conversations.

Please enjoy today's episode hosted by Alan Dunne.

Alan:

Thanks for that introduction Niels. Today I'm delighted to be joined by Ian Harness. Ian is co founder and Chief Investment Strategist at Absolute Strategy Research.

The firm has been in existence just coming up to 20 years now, so celebrating their 20 year anniversary this year. Ian's a veteran of the markets. He's been around for about four decades in markets now.

Started off as an economist at the bank of England and then worked with Soc Gen, NatWest and UBS where at UBS he was Chief European Investment Strategist. So Ian, great to have you on. How are you today?

Ian:

Thank you very much. An invitation Alan?

Alan:

Not at all, no. I followed your work through your career at at various times.

So great to have the chance to to chat and as we always do to start off, we like to get a sense on how you got interested in markets and I suppose before that even economics. What was that?

Ian:

Well, yeah, I, I, I have to say I'm afraid it goes back a long way that I think I wrote my first economics article on, on the, the shape of inflation when I was probably at primary school.

Alan:

Okay.

Ian:

hat was of course back in the:

But it was also very much at school where first of all I found out that I actually quite enjoyed economics when I did it at a level but also in history, learning about the impact of great economists like Keynes in the pre war, post war period and thinking, well actually maybe this is something that can make a difference to the world rather than just being an interesting academic study.

Alan:

Very good. Well these days you're trying to make a difference to people's portfolios, I guess. And it's, we're at an interesting juncture.

I know you've written a lot lately about the, I suppose you might call it the regime shift in the world. And you know, we had Davos recently and Carney speaking about a rupture. And I know that's a theme you've picked up on.

I mean, to put that all in context, I mean, how would you kind of characterize that regime change, the most salient features of the new regime?

Ian:

I think the key thing that we're talking about at absolute strategy is the way that the relationship between stocks and bonds that all of us have known for that 40 year period, it's really changing that.

After four years where Central banks have consistently missed their inflation targets, we are starting to see people saying, hang on a minute, maybe the way out of this debt problem is a little bit more inflation and less reliance on keeping the nominal side of the economy under control.

And that encourages a shift away from having bonds as the safe asset or the natural hedge in your portfolio if like, you know, most funds are going to be probably more than 50% invested in equities.

Alan:

usly we had the experience in:

You know, obviously you would have had it back in the 70s and maybe we, you know, some of us might remember that somewhere.

Yeah, but it was really, you know, prior to that people talked about the possibility of a resurgence of inflation, but people didn't really believe it, but to see it inflation rates get back up to whatever it was, 7, 8%, maybe even a little bit higher, was something.

And Obviously then in:

But there are still those who believe, well, take out the impact of tariffs, that it would probably be closer to 2%. So yes, there are plenty of people that kind of would agree with your I suppose, synopsis of maybe inflation being more of a challenge.

But then it's not a universally held view. I mean, what do you think are the key factors that will keep inflation more elevated here?

Ian:

Well, I think when you think about some of the changes that we're seeing in society and the investment that that will need to be made, that shift in the economic structure tends to create increased costs.

The second thing I think is to recognize that a world that becomes more fractured, where we get this weaponization of trade, economic growth, potentially less globalized, that those long thin supply chains that allowed companies to access the lowest cost possible price of labor, lowest possible price of goods and the lowest price of capital, those are changing and that is likely to push inflation pressures up as well. So those are the kind of things, I think, Alan, that make us feel that structurally inflation's going to come down.

Tactically, the thing we've been talking to clients about is that every central banker in the world should be entirely grateful to the Communist Party of China because actually the exported deflation in goods prices is actually doing a lot of the work of holding inflation down. If you look at service sector inflation in the U.S. even in the Eurozone, it's 3, 4% still.

So I think that central bankers need to be a bit careful about patting themselves on the backs.

Alan:

Yes, for sure. And I mean, we'll probably get into China in a bit more detail later. But just on that point, is that something you see? I mean, hitting a limit?

Obviously there's a lot of people saying that this, the rest of the world isn't going to absorb China's surplus on an ongoing basis. How do you see that playing out?

Ian:

Well, I think that, you know, that's one of the big problems for China, which is that they do have to generate more of a domestic growth narrative.

And our China economist, Adam Wolf, who's excellent, you know, is, is still very concerned that with the housing market which is a key source of wealth and confidence for Chinese consumers still under pressure that that's very difficult to achieve unless you have a big fiscal expansion. And that's what the Chinese authorities don't really want to do.

And yes, clearly in a world, a more fractured this more fractured world, America's not going to want Chinese dumped goods. Europe's not going to want those dumped goods either. And so that's going to make it a much more complex trading environment for everybody.

Alan:

Yeah, I mean, you've touched on, you know, the weaponization of credit of capital.

Obviously it was very much to the fore at Davos when, you know, when Trump floated the idea of more tariffs in Europe and then the debate was around, well, what can Europe do? Could Europe, you know, try and impose some measures to dissuade investors invest investing in Treasury?

So I mean, we've already had the weaponization or conflict in trade. So obviously capital could be the next frontier. How do you see that evolving?

Ian:

clearly something back to the:

But let's hope that we don't get to that stage.

I think what we're seeing is that particularly say for somewhere like Europe, Europe has a problem because if we still have a number of separate economies rather than capital markets union in a world where you're relying on your domestic capital much more because you see investors saying I'm going to stay at home or governments even directing you to stay at home, know a bit like Rachel Reeves in the UK trying to encourage the, you know, the retail investors here to invest in the UK Then Europe actually just doesn't really have very effective capital markets. And so, you know, even Germany, you know, where with the type of fiscal expansion they're talking about for both infrastructure and for defense.

Well, there's a lot of debt issuance coming through and if it has to all be absorbed by German, then that's German institutions and that's problematic. And again could push by some of these bond you attire.

Alan:

Okay.

And I mean obviously there's been a lot of talking suggestions in Europe we had drag ease report out and there's been a recognition of the need to do something productivity. And equally, the likes of Macron has talked about the, you know, the potential European surplus of capital and trying to redirect that back.

Sounds like you're not very optimistic on anything dramatic changing in Europe in terms of kind of mutualized debt issuance or anything like that.

Ian:

No, I think one of the things, again, we've said to our clients is that actually the best thing that could happen to the Eurozone is a French debt crisis.

Because to get a capital markets union emerging in anything less than five years, and it'll be here in five years, is something that we've heard for at least the last five years, and I suspect we'll hear it for the next five years if we don't. Europe has lacked that Munich moment for capital that it had for defense.

And it really took a very unsubtle comment by JD or set of comments by JD Vance, 15 minutes, turned on it, on its European policy, on its head. We need something like that to galvanize European politicians. And the Draghi report, Draghi's comments recently, they're not enough.

You're going to have to have something that's large enough that it doesn't completely destroy the European Union, but important enough that the rest of Europe has to say, right, we're going to stand with this and create, you know, bonds. And actually that would be the strongest way to challenge America if Europe created a large safe asset to offset as an alternative to Treasuries.

There's $9.6 trillion of EU money currently invested across U.S. treasuries, U.S. equities and U.S. credit. That might well not be retaliatory repatriation, which obviously would be very much the weaponization, but more economically driven repatriation.

Alan:

And I mean, from the US side, obviously we've had a number of conflicting cross currents in terms of the weaponization of capital.

On the one hand, you've had, I suppose, tacit approval of a weaker dollar is one thing, but at the same time a desire for the dollar to be the reserve currency.

You've got these deals that they've cut to attract capital in as well, but at the same time, concerns about funding the deficits and obviously going back to Moran's paper, some kind of extreme kind of policy proposals around trying to maintain capital inflow. So, I mean, in this world of more fragmentation, potential capital wars, do you see the US being more of a winner or a loser or more or less at risk?

Ian:

Well, at the moment I think they've been a very strong winner. If you look at the White House website, President Trump is talking about having secured 9.6 trillion.

So quite interestingly, that's the same amount as Europe could shift offshore. They're bringing capital into the US and as you say, quite often in exchange for a reduction in tariffs.

So, you know, looking in more detail at that national allocation, there's a commitment of about $6.7 trillion. That's a big amount of money from national governments.

And the net effect is that that's actually seen tariff levels come down, the median tariff levels come down for those countries that are playing that game with America, from 25% to 15%. So the point we've been making is that this is. It's almost like paying tributes to the monarch.

And there's some academic work around neo royalism for those people that want to have a look. The policy wonks are going down this route that actually getting access to the monarch, you have to pay up front for it. And this is very.

So America, I think, is, is doing a very good job from their perspective at trying to offset the risks of that capital flight.

And, you know, with Europe saying that they, you know, they would do a $600 billion deal, Europe's actually at the moment saying, we'll play by your rules. So that sounds to me like America winning.

Alan:

Yes. Now, I mean, there is a bit of skepticism around some of these numbers.

I mean, every time Trump loves To quote a 500 billion, it seems like for every baseline, for every deal, and then there's always a question, is this stuff that was going to happen anyway or not? But it sounds like you think there will be genuine flows.

Ian:

I think the point that we've made to people is let's imagine that this was all funneled, and this is, you know, this is not the case at the moment. It's being funneled at the discretion of President Trump or being funneled through individual areas.

But let's say this was funneled through a new sovereign wealth fund, and there was that discussion about a US Sovereign wealth fund being created, and only a third of that number materialized.

You would still be talking about a fund that is as large as the Nauseous bank, and the Norges bank is one of the 10 largest holders of nine of the 10 largest U.S. companies. Just think what that impact would have in terms of capital market allocation.

And we're actually already seeing it with some of these direct investment deals that the American government's doing in terms of. Of aiming to secure Mineral rights and resources generally around the world.

Alan:

Yeah, I mean taking a step back and looking at what's been achieved to date, obviously we're probably just over a year into Trump 2.0 and I mean for a lot of the first year there was kind of discussion like what's the ultimate objective here? Is it re industrialization of the US or is it just to fund the deficit with the tariffs?

I mean you mentioned this kind of neo royalist era which does sum it up very well. What's your take? What's the economic ideology if there is one driving this?

Ian:

I think we believe that the Trump administration and remember this is a broad alliance of three or four different groupings. Republican. Right. You know, the tech Bros. The unilateralists and then the multilateralists.

But what they're coming together to do is to roll back the economic and social structures to back towards the Reaganite era.

agan Thatcher axis did in the:

And I think both of the things that you mentioned Alan, are on the agenda in terms of the re industrialization of the United States. But I also think that.

Let's go back to Scott Besant's three arrows and he loves Shinzo Abe but he came up with the 3% GDP growth, 3% deficit and 3 million barrels per day more energy. And I think what lies at the heart there of this is the Republicans aiming to get the deficits under control through higher nominal growth.

So this is another reason why we're much more comfortable with the idea that the economy will be run hot to get those debt ratios under control. But to offset the inflation risk to some extent you need that energy, you need cheap energy.

So I think this is at the heart of what we've also some of the policy measures. But it seems to me to be a very broad brush and a very ambitious project that the Republicans are working towards.

And the midterms are going to be a bit test of that.

Alan:

Yeah. Before we get on to midterms, I mean do you think that's realistic? I mean it had a great ring to it.

333 but you know, obviously we've had the big beautiful bill which made zero progress heading towards a 3% deficit. Now obviously the great hope is as you say, that economic growth is strong and it was talk about deregulation.

Obviously we've seen that with respect to maybe AI and crypto, stuff like that. And obviously productivity has picked up, although it's debatable what's driving that. So I mean, do you buy into that narrative of a supply?

Ian:

I think that we can, I think we can still see that the momentum behind those ideas. So the deregulation of finance will be, you know, and banks, we've clearly seen the deregulation around the crypto areas.

I think what Scott Besant understands probably better than most, and I think he's a very accomplished economist and investor, is that the counterpart to the public sector deficit is the private sector surplus.

So the only way to get that 3% debt ratio that they want, need effectively to keep the rate, the interest payments under control is that they have to get investment coming through, they have to get consumer spending.

And historically, the only way that really you've got the deficits down for governments in terms of debt to GDP is you've always had to get the rest of the economy to take on debt.

Alan:

Okay.

Ian:

Yeah, okay.

me down, apart from since the:

They're going to run, try and re lever the housing market, re lever consumers, you know, let them borrow against their crypto assets. What could possibly go wrong?

Alan:

Exactly.

Well, you mentioned running the economy hot and obviously we've had the announcement now, of course, Warsh as the nominee to be Fed chair, and again, lots of different views on Warsh, and he has at times sounded hawkish and at times sounded dovish. How do you think he'll play it in the early days?

Ian:

I think the thing that strikes me about Chair Elect Walsh and I had the pleasure of listening to him at the Atlanta Fed conference conference a couple of years ago where, you know, he was actually he, you know, in front of a number of Fed presidents, regional presidents. It did seem as though he was chair in waiting, even at that stage. So he is taken very seriously.

His ideas, I think, are taken very seriously within the Federal Reserve System would be my perception. And so I think that he is likely to want to deliver those lower interest rates that President Trump will suggest.

eech that he gave that day in:

And it also Fits with an article that Scott Besant wrote about the scope, curtailing the scope of the Federal Reserve and the range of activities of the Federal Reserve.

So the way that I could see this playing out is that actually the negative surprise for markets could be that Chair Warsh says, okay, no more bond purchases, no more MBS purchases. We are going to reduce the size of the balance sheet. But you know what, that reduces global liquidity.

And so you could get those bond yields coming down or interest rates coming down because we actually start to see some of the froth coming out of markets. And in the past, rates have responded when the froth has come out of market.

So it may not be quite as market friendly as I think a lot of people would like, but I can see how he could reconcile getting rates down. But it's probably around that qt. Accelerating qt.

Alan:

Yeah, obviously the Fed has totally shifted how it conducts monetary policy into this excess reserve system.

So there is some debate as to what he says is really plausible because obviously when they've tried to shrink the balance sheet before, it's led to problems in the repo market, etc.

Ian:

And I think one of the things that's been a feature of the discussions I've listened to over the last couple of years is the discussion about the ample reserve system. And so I think there could be some quite interesting technical changes.

And it wouldn't surprise me that we see some of at the same time that there's deregulation for banks, that there might be some changed views around how the reserve programs work and maybe the US moving something closer towards what we see in Europe and the uk.

Alan:

Okay, so taking all of that together, it sounds like you're quite upbeat or moderately so on the US economic outlook. Is that fair to say?

Ian:

Yeah, for the moment, Alan, you know, it seems, you know, maybe, I don't know whether it's contra consensual or not, but. But actually we're sticking with that overweight US view.

osest that we came to it were:

And the point we've made to clients is that it's so unusual that it's unlikely that it will persist to the end of the year. It may do. And this is the game that the administration are trying to play. Strong growth, lower rates.

But if it doesn't, well, which way would you like it to converge? Historically, if you get lower rates because earnings growth is tanking, then that's never been good for equities.

Normally over the last 12 interest rate cycles, when you've had a pivot, I think 10 out of the 12 were negative and the median decline was about 20% or 24%, I think was the figure that we calculated.

So the markets will actually be much healthier, ironically, if we manage to keep nominal growth healthy and rate expectations start to get revised out. So I think that's a more stable environment for markets.

Alan:

I mean, I think the general sense, my understanding is of investors is of fairly bullish sentiment at the moment, kind of reflecting what you're saying. Growth out looks good, but. And the Fed still expected maybe to ease at some point, if not sooner rather than later.

I mean, I know you do your own asset allocation survey in abstract strategy research. What are you seeing in that survey?

Ian:

So the asset allocation survey is still giving us that same kind of outcome around both the global economy and also the outlook for equities versus bonds. I think the interesting thing is that people have become more ambivalent about the direction of bonds.

They've also become a bit more ambivalent about the direction of inflation as well. So there's question marks that are opening up here.

But what we are seeing is a bit of a move towards what one might class value trades, things like commodities, emerging markets. So there's a recognition that the core investments that you've perhaps had are over the last 10 years are starting to lose some of their shine.

Alan:

Okay. I mean, obviously not only are you doing the survey, you're speaking to a lot of investors.

I mean, when you talk to them about this regime change in the global economy, and also as you mentioned at the outset, that change potentially in the bond equity correlation, are you seeing many tangible changes in portfolios on the back of that?

Ian:

So not really. And one of the points that we make is that historically, when you get to get the rotation out of the US you need three things.

First of all, the dollar needs to come down. Well, we've seen a bit of that, but it's stabilized. Secondly, you need the global economy to grow rapidly.

And can that happen without China being a bit more. More dynamic? But the third and most challenging element is that the US ROEs have to disappoint relative to the rest of the world.

And at the moment, given how much those margins, those ROEs are being driven by the US tech companies, effectively, you're saying you've got to have a tech blowup. And if that happens the risk is that you would then move to what we call a correlation. One event.

Yes, the markets come off, everything, you know, loses value and then you want to be in low beta.

The trouble is that some of the things that you might want to rotate into emerging markets, commodities, historically, you know, they can be quite, quite high beta.

So what we're seeing from clients is that one or two people are making that rotation a bit more towards commodities, a bit more towards the emerging markets, but they tend to be larger funds who say look, I'm so large, I recognize that Ian, but I'm so large, if I don't start now, I'm never going to get there.

Alan:

Well, it is something we've seen obviously we're recording on the the 5th of February, but in the last week or so, maybe a couple of weeks, this, you know, outperformance of value versus growth, you know, we've had days where the, the, the, the NASDAQ is down, but the Dow is holding up or even up, you know, and, and if you look at the sectors, industrials and materials doing well and we've had this, yeah, I've just heard this expression, this SAS coup lips. Hey, I only heard of, heard of that one today. But obviously the softer the SAS sector is getting hit badly.

I mean as you say, normally if you get a big sell off, everything gets dragged down is this, I mean if you were kind of advising on strategy, sexual allocations, are you at the moment we would.

Ian:

We're sticking with that more positive cyclical view.

Alan:

Okay.

Ian:

You know, because you know, you're, you're and, and you know, the com. The interesting thing about value is that non US value has been outperforming for about 18 months.

you know, since the start of:

So we've seen non US value outperforming growth already.

I think that the challenge for people and I think this is one of the big something that my colleague Will Moss wrote about for our clients very recently ahead of the SASS apocalypse, which is the irony is that people are thinking that by rotating into private equity and private credit, they're diversifying away from tech. What the last week has shown them is that actually the largest holdings of private equity and private credit are in tech.

And actually listed high yield has got less tech exposure than private credit.

Alan:

Yeah, interesting. Yes.

Ian:

So how you diversify in this environment is really challenging, I think.

Alan:

Yeah. That's interesting. I mean it just shows you what the labels are put on things. Don't. That's a matter a lot.

Ian:

Absolutely. I can't say anything. Having worked for investment banks for 20 years, I couldn't possibly comment about that.

Alan:

Yeah, yeah, well it's true. I mean high yield would traditionally have higher exposure to things like energy, wouldn't it? Yeah, yeah.

Ian:

And you know, one of the things that we've been talking to clients about thinking about where you can get, you know, superior returns and, and if there's a very high correlation between equities and high and, and, and credit.

Alan:

Yeah.

Ian:

High yield credit I think is actually a really interesting asset class now because it's one of the few things that does have what it says on the tin. So investment grade post GFC we saw a big rise in the lowest grade investment BBB from about 30% pre GFC to over 50% now.

A lot of the, a lot of high yield stuff got revamped into investment grade or if it wasn't, it wasn't capable of being, you know, got away in the public markets. It's gone to the private markets.

Alan:

Yeah.

Ian:

So actually high yield I think really is, you know, what you're dealing with, you know, the scale of risk.

So you know, I think that, you know, this is, this is, you know, if you want that enhanced yield I would actually go into to that space rather than to. Sorry, a bit of a digression.

Alan:

No, no, I mean definitely private credit is topical at the moment and what you say is definitely, I mean as.

Ian:

Long as the key point for about that we say for credit and credit really is important because you'd never have a bear market in equities without having a bear market in credit.

Alan:

Exactly. Yeah.

Ian:

But you're not going to get a bear market in credit until you have cash flow crises. So this is where that nominal growth. So the phrase we've used to clients is nominal.

Alan:

Nominal.

Ian:

Nominal nominal GDP growth. If it's over 4% then your nominal earnings are going to be fine and that means your nominal cash flow will not be challenged.

that's the mistake we made in:

We thought the slowdown that was likely to come and did materialize in real terms but because inflation was still high, the nominal earnings, the nominal cash flows weren't stressed and so we didn't have a big market, you know, as large a market kind of sell off as we might have had. So you know that for US is really what we're focusing on with clients. We're saying what's those nominal numbers?

What's those nominal phenomenal cash flows? And even in the, in things like the tech sector as well.

Alan:

We touched a bit on, you know, the, the dollar and weakened last year somewhat, but not, you know, not dramatically. And you know, sentiment certainly got quite negative towards the dollar as last year progressed.

With at times there was a sell us min mentality and then it's probably dipped down a little bit at the start of this year, but has recovered. And then was it last week or the week before there was talk of the Fed were checking rates in dollar yen which is kind of a highly unusual event.

What's your sense on say from a fundamental perspective, the fundamental drivers and then what's the US Administration, are they changing tack with respect to the dollar? But you know that checking on rates.

Ian:

I think the point we've made about the dollar is that our chief economist Dominic White has done some great work around what kind of dollar rates you would need to re equilibrate the current account and the trade account and the capital account. And that points to a decline of something like 15%.

Alan:

Okay.

Ian:

But the question is when and against whom. And I think that's one of the, and that's one of the challenges that you have.

You know, if you want the dollar to come down, something has to appreciate.

Alan:

Yeah.

Ian:

And clearly, you know, it doesn't seem as though the Chinese authorities can be very keen on that. Europe, you know, is, is probably also, you know, wary about seeing the euro go very much higher than this. Again.

This is one reason why the European inflation rates have been under control. But it's going to depress growth to some extent at some stage.

And historically that might see the euro rates or people think twice about whether euro rates would go up and effectively the Euro is doing the kind of monetary tightening that rates might have done potentially.

So you really, you're left against the yen and you know, that is the problem there is how much of unwinding that yen carry trade would then disrupt, you know, other financial flows globally. So you know that's the, the big risk but you know, the big decline in real effective exchange rate terms has definitely been the end.

Alan:

Yeah. So you would say that that's the one that's the outlier then that that's the one that should be material.

Ian:

Absolutely. We've got a lovely chart of bis real effective exchange rates back to 40 odd years. We love our charts, we love our history.

Alan:

Yes.

Ian:

if you renormalize it around:

They were very definitely seen as the floating, you know, the, the unsinkable aircraft carrier. And you know, that, you know, is one reason why we still like Japanese equities.

You know, we think that, you know, they're seeing their roes going up, you know, they're getting big competitiveness gains from this.

Alan:

Yes. And obviously the running monetary policy with negative real yields. So that's I guess positive for the equity market.

Ian:

Yeah. And, and you know, our view would be that some normalization of that over the next couple of years seems very likely.

The trend towards higher, higher interest rates in Japan will probably continue, but it'll be at a, at a, at a slow pace, I suspect.

Alan:

I mean there has been this fear that we would get a blow up in the JGB market and higher yields that could have big second order impacts. But we have had a huge run up in yields but no major impact on currencies or else for, I mean, has that been a surprise?

Ian:

I think the fact that the, you know, the currency moves haven't been that large.

Personally, I, you know, looking at the US dollar yen chart, it seems to me that to really unwind, I know people will say, oh well, the technicals suggest that the carry tray is being unwound and look at the longs versus shorts. But if you look at actually how the currencies behaved, it really needs to get back to about 120.

I think to unwind and appreciation from there would really start to cause problems. But the idea that we could see some repatriation to Japan away from international assets as yields go higher seems to be perfectly sensible.

But I was looking at some numbers earlier this week. You know, the Caribbean has higher exposure to US assets than, than Japan does now. But of course that's hedge funds.

Alan:

Hedge funds.

Ian:

Yeah. So yeah, yeah, there's, there's other sources of risk that could come through and, and bump us on the n. Yeah.

Alan:

Well, I mean the one asset that you could say we're seeing the fears about the dollar or fiat currencies in general is obviously gold and, and then obviously silver as a corollary. I mean people pointed to the debasement trade, but I mean it is striking the magnitude of the move we've seen in gold.

You've been a student of economics and markets going back to the 70s. And I think it's fair to say the moves we've seen now have been as great, if not greater, which seems surprising.

I mean, why do you think we're seeing such big moves in metals markets at the moment?

Ian:

So I think we're seeing a range of factors coming together, Alan. First of all, we've been talking about gold and alternatives to the dollar for a number of years.

So David Bowers, my co founder myself very strongly believe that the BRICS plus group have come together because they want to get away from being beholden to the US or think authorities and their control of the financial system through the dollar and swift.

And even back in the aftermath of the pandemic, sorry, the gfc, Bob Zirlick, who was the head of the World bank at the time, proposed that there should be a new global currency built around effectively a commodity backed sdr. And I think that that group are taking that to heart.

And we've seen those BRICs plus purchases of gold, central bank purchases of gold rising almost monotonically for the last two to three years in the aftermath of the Ukrainian invasion and the sanctions on Russia. So I think that that process is coming into, to get playing into it.

But then on top of that, if you do think that central banks have missed their targets for multiple years, then you might start to look for other asset classes but also this willingness to move towards a range of alternative assets as your inflation hedge. So I don't think it's necessarily just a debasement trade and sadly all our models have broken down in terms of real yields and the dollar.

And you know, so that to me says that it's this structural story that is also playing a role. Yeah.

Alan:

And do you think it's literally, I mean, do you think these central banks are possibly accumulating enough gold to create a new system anchored on gold?

Ian:

Well, I think it's going to be more than gold because it's going to have to. But then for those of us that have been around long enough, there were lots of stories about China over accumulating copper.

Alan:

Okay, yes.

Ian:

And other, other type of base metals.

So something basis, some, some kind of, of shift where you did see something supported and you know, some kind of nominal anchor, you know, of backing currencies I don't think is an impossibility to see within the next 10 years. But the point we've made to clients is that the shareholders shift away from the dollar has been taking place for almost 20 years.

It's lost its share of global reserves, currency reserves has come down 10% over that 20 year period. It's been a trend decline, but the shift up in the gold side is very definitely accelerating.

ne back to where they were in:

Alan:

I mean that was another feature of the old regime. Obviously we had globalization, falling inflation and obviously central bank, independent central banks and inflation targeting.

I mean you were probably, well, obviously you started at the bank of England in the old era when it was between the bank and the Treasury. I mean, what will that look like, do you think?

I mean, the reason they went to independent central banks is because politicians meddle on interest rates and eventually you get higher inflation. Is that ultimately where this plays out?

Ian:

It was to try and gain credibility for the politicians, which was actually again, probably a way of just trying to let them spend more, ironically.

But the mechanisms in a non independent framework work well because you actually see monetary policy and fiscal policy working together to get the best outcome for the economy. I'm probably at the extreme and I'm not sure that independent central banking has worked well for society.

There's an asymmetry in terms of willingness not to raise rates because they don't want to be blamed for a recession. So anytime unemployment goes up, they'll cut rates, but they don't want to raise rates when, as we saw in the inflation shock, inflation goes up.

So it's actually, it's been tremendously beneficial for financial markets, for profits, for the rentier class, as it's referred to.

Alan:

But that was arguably asset purchases and a particular byproduct of the financial crisis and the influence of Bernanke, I guess, and people like that.

Ian:

But if you look at capital, if you look at labor share of national income, the rise in inequality, and then we wonder why we have greater, you know, populism, high levels of populism. So I actually think, I think, I personally think that a shift towards a more balanced central bank treasury relationship is probably quite healthy.

Alan:

Yes.

Ian:

For society as a whole, you know, the alternative becomes much less palatable.

Alan:

Yeah, and we, I mean, we can obviously see that taking shape to an extent in the U.S. already, you know, with, you know, Warsh and Besant both talking about no Fed treasury accord again.

Ian:

Or, and I think that, that, you know, the, the markets might be nervous about that and they might well be right to be nervous about it because again, what it would argue for is probably a bit higher inflation, wages being allowed to get, you know, a bit more purchase relative to profits and bonds yields being modestly higher.

But again, the administration will try and stop that rise in bond yields because they want to re lever the housing market and that's why low energy prices are so critical to them.

Alan:

And if we were to get that type of dynamic, obviously we can see it possibly playing out in the US and I guess in the uk even during COVID there was nearly direct financing of, of the, of the deficit. Obviously in Europe it's different. We've got a treaty. Very hard to unwind all of that.

But could you have this kind of two speed scenarios more independent in some places and do those places have stronger currencies then or not? Or how would you say yes, you.

Ian:

Know, and maybe that is the, the answer. They would have the strong currency. But remember that Christine Lagarde came from the dark side.

Alan:

Sure, yes.

Ian:

So you could argue even there we've seen some politicization at the central bank and certainly a voice that's more attuned to the political environment.

Alan:

Yeah, interesting.

We mentioned the midterms very briefly earlier on and I think we were talking earlier, you were saying there is this sentiment out there that maybe we'll just have this administration and eventually things will return to normal. And if that was the case, maybe the first step towards that would be a Democrat resurgence in the midterms. How are you using it?

Ian:

Currently? The predicted markets are only suggesting a 20% clean sweep for the Republicans, 37% for the Democrats.

I think the administration will do everything that they can to try and win those, to certainly limit the losses on the midterms and preferably win them and certainly keep control of the House if they can.

My big fear for markets is that if it becomes certain that the Republican administration are going to lose in a big way, then I think the risk of internecine warfare at the heart of the U.S. administration becomes great. And that four way coalition that I outlined starts to fracture very dramatically. And at that point I really would be selling the dollar.

That is going to be the point at which you'll say, well hang on a minute, there's a lot of rogue elements here and unless there was something that materialized to stabilize the ship very dramatically. So that to me seems to be the one of the biggest gray swans out there.

Alan:

So presumably for a moment their playbook is to get the economy running hot this year if possible. And that to boost prospects for the.

Ian:

Republicans and keep unemployment low, keep households happy or as happy as they can be, if you believe some of the survey numbers and there's got, I think there's quite a lot of doubt around those. But the risk is that if that doesn't happen, then you're in for a much bigger period of volatility.

ay prior to the election, the:

Alan:

Yeah, I mean we've talked about this regime shift, changed international order, talked about impact on the us, Europe to an extent. I mean where are the other winners and losers in this new environment internationally?

Ian:

Well, I think that we see, you know, the world probably fracturing into four elements. There's actually some international relations theories that suggest that five's the optimal number.

But at the moment we can't work out where the, where the fifth would be. But the four groups would be Fortress America with Canada, despite Mark Carney's desires actually having to link up with America and Mexico.

You know, the USMCA negotiations this year will be critical. You have the Asian bloc coalescing around China.

I call it Slurotic Europe because I really don't see much of a driver there without capital markets union.

But then there's a non aligned block of the Middle East, India, Turkey, South Africa, the BRICS without the R and the C. Really that would be an interesting group where I think investment opportunities will be strong and if we see a rotation towards either commodities or emerging markets, they all stand to gain.

The other area that we've emphasized is, and David Bowers, my co founder is particularly keen on is this idea that if we do see a Trumpian donroe policy emerge and the Western hemisphere is viewed as America, then a rightward shift for a lot of Latin American economies as the counterpart to gaining access to a US security umbrella would actually see the potential for a lot of RE rating in Latin America.

Alan:

Yeah, and it sounds like Europe is a loser in this environment.

And you know, one of the things we heard a lot of last week is the end of the rules based system, international system, which it's kind of is term nearly synonymous with, with, with Europe.

Ian:

Yeah, Europe, Europe is built around a, a rules based system. And, and the, you know, the, the framework that Europe has is a very rules based framework.

You know, regulation is, is, is its core Competency and I might say overregulation at times.

So yeah, you know, I think Europe, the risk for Europe is that it does get left behind with the demographics and you know, it is regulating growth areas like AI very aggressively.

Now that again, that may be the right thing for the very long run for society, but for the next five to 10 years it could see capital and labor and intellect go elsewhere where it can experiment more freely and develop more freely.

Alan:

Yeah, I'm just conscious of kind of bringing it together in terms of asset allocation.

I'm sure a lot of your plants you're working with are thinking about asset allocation not just for the next kind of three to six months, but kind of six months to three years or five years even. I mean there's a lot, a lot of uncertainty there as you. We don't know how the midterms are going to play out.

We don't know how that would impact the dollar. But I mean, if you were thinking about asset allocation on that time frame, what are the obvious or the high conviction shifts?

Ian:

I think that the thing that we've been talking to people about is to identify the entry points that they would want to make for some of the assets that are likely to be long term winners in a world of stronger nominal growth and higher inflation and positive stock bond correlations. So that does take you towards a more value driven framework rather than growth.

It takes you towards dividends and income and it takes you towards, towards commodities and emerging markets. As I say, the risk is that if you have a hiatus moment.

Yes, you know, making those moves early, you know, probably won't damage you too badly relative to other areas. And I think we are starting to see signs that the growth bubble, and we do believe the AI bubble is a bubble that, that is coming to a close.

But you know, that rotation I think is one, if we're right, it's going to be a five to ten year rotation. That means you don't have to be in it for the first six months.

Alan:

And I mean one of the parallels people have been drawing recently is kind of with the 90s to mid. Are we closer to 95 or 99?

But equally, I mean, you could equally draw parallels with the kind of late 60s and, and nifty 50 and the higher inflation environment there. I mean, you've been in the markets for four decades. Do you see obvious parallels between now?

Ian:

The parallel I worry about is:

Alan:

Okay, right, yeah.

Ian:

I think if we're in that:

Exponential returns on a log scale, buying each other's companies activity, buying each other's goods, doing that via vendor financing.

But the last bit of this is always excessive capex and the problem is that you run out of people to sell to, they have the cash flow crisis and then you just get your, your margins absolutely whacked. But remember that most bubbles when they burst, they do give back over the next five years.

Everything, all the outperformance that they ran out relative to.

Alan:

Yes, yeah, well, interesting. Conscious of time and we do like to, as we wrap up, just get you some reflections.

I mean you've been in the markets long time for people who are now starting off in your career maybe want to get better at macro, at economics. I mean, what do you think? Any things you've read or done that have been very helpful for you in your career?

Ian:

So I think that there's, there's lots, there's just, I've, I, I, you know.

Alan:

A lot of books behind you, a.

Ian:

Lot of books behind me. There are a tremendous number of helpful books.

Reading, you know, is, is, is really important but, but I think the other thing is to recognize is that in the last five years a lot of people feel that macro hasn't been important and isn't going to be important anymore. And I think that's a very dangerous assumption.

So understanding where we are in the economic cycle and thinking about those macro relationships I think is very crucial.

And reading, you know, excellent commentators, you know, who are strong in their macro like John Orders and Rob Armstrong, not wanting to limiting to those, but those are people that I've enjoyed listening to, working with over the years, you know, and just getting yourself more up to speed. Hard to identify any particular books and that's one of the lovely things about being a strategist rather than economist.

There's loads of textbooks about economics, there are, are very few about investment strategy.

Alan:

Right, interesting. Yeah, well, maybe you'll address that someday now that you've hit your two decade anniversary. But thanks very much for coming on, Ian.

Obviously our listeners can follow your work at Absolute Strategy Research and I can.

Ian:

Feel LinkedIn and things like that.

Alan:

Yeah, exactly. Well, great, thanks a lot. And from all of us here at Top Traders Unplugged, thanks for dialing in and we'll be back soon with more content.

Ending:

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