Bill Gross' Ominous Outlook For 2020 Comes As Stimulus Loses Its "Oomph"
Bill Gross spoke with Financial Times US markets editor Jennifer Ablan. Gross laid it all out for her, warning that 2020 could be a sluggish year for financial assets as fiscal and monetary stimulus becomes ineffective, or as he put it: the stimulus is losing its "oomph."
Gross is echoing what central bankers and government officials in many G7 countries are warning about at the moment: the stimulus isn't working as a synchronized global slowdown continues to gain momentum.
He said gains in stocks and bonds could be depressed next year as central banks have figured out that ultra-low interest rates aren't the prescription to fixing structural issues.
Fed funds futures aren't pricing in interest rate cuts until next summer. The most recent FOMC minutes show the Federal Reserve is likely on-hold with already three rate cuts since July. Gross said the Fed isn't expected to use negative interest rates when the next recession strikes.
Gross said US stocks would be "flat to down 10%" in 2020, while the UST10Y would end the year around 1.75% level.
He also said stimulus from the 2017 Tax Cut and Jobs Act (TCJA) has already worked through the system and has now become a fiscal drag. "To retain the 1% boost that it provided to the economy . . . the deficit needs to expand by another $1tn or else the economy expands by 1% less," he said.
Gross touched on politics with Ablan. He said the 2020 political environment would produce volatility for financial markets.
He added that President Trump's "schizophrenic day-to-day" tweeting and the "Democrats waver between centrist and ultra-liberal candidates" are leading to uncertainty in the economy and markets.
With GDPNoW estimates crashing towards zero for Q4, Gross understands that a recession could be on the horizon.
https://ift.tt/2KYTnwb
from ZeroHedge News https://ift.tt/2KYTnwb
via IFTTT
0 comments
Post a Comment