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PIMCO: Don't Get Complacent About Inflation Risks

PIMCO: Don't Get Complacent About Inflation Risks

Eric Jacobson: Hi, I'm Eric Jacobson with Morningstar. I'm here today at the Morningstar Conference with Dan Ivascyn, who heads up the bond operation at PIMCO for the investment side.

Dan, thank you so much for coming to chat with us today.

Dan Ivascyn: Thanks Eric, excited to be here.

Jacobson: So, the topic that's always first and foremost for everyone is inflation. So, if you could give us a sense of where you guys stand right now on your expectations. And one thing I'd really be curious to be know is, so, let's say that either you're wrong or the Fed's wrong, you know, the market turns out to be wrong. What are the consequences for investors, especially in terms of magnitude if things don't go as expected?

Ivascyn: Sure. So, a few important points there. In terms of our base-case forecast we still think that inflation will remain relatively contained. In fact, across most areas of the developed world we could even see inflation tail off a little bit later this year. So, we think that the inflation rates will remain at central bank targets, even be a little bit below targets across key regions of the world. Now with that said, investors can't be complacent and there are couple of reasons for that. One is probably a long-term theme and that is that there is too much debt in the world. Debt levels are at the highest in history, higher than they were at the beginning of the financial crisis and any time you have an environment where debt levels are very high, nominal growth rates are very low, you have to worry about how policymakers are going to deal with that.

Large piles of debt can be dealt with through write-downs. You can grow your way out of those challenges, or you can choose policy that may lead to some surprise inflation as well. That's always a risk for bondholders.

In the United States in particular, we are at a late-cycle stage in our economy. We are beginning to see some signs of wage pressure. Some signs of capacity issues in the labor force. This is occurring at a time when the new administration is proposing pretty aggressive stimulus. In that type of environment, the risks of overheating of inflation here in this country go up pretty significantly. It's not our base case, but it is a risk that we're focusing on. It's a risk that we're following and it's a risk that we are trying to protect our clients from as best we can in the context of the fixed-income strategies that we manage.

Jacobson: So, it's interesting because some of the things that you described sound like risks that are deflationary in the global sense, and tell me if you think I am missing that in terms of the debt situation and so forth. But some obviously risks on the upside is that--do you look at that as being differentiated across economies and what are the risks to the U.S. if things don't go well elsewhere?

Ivascyn: We do think risks are somewhat symmetrical, where we are still in a world as you pointed out with lots of debt and there are certainly scenarios that could lead to disinflationary or even outright deflation pressure. That's something that we also want to be concerned about. In terms of inflation risks themselves, at least in the near term, it's more of a U.S. focus. Given that we are an economy that is growing above potential, productivity growth is still relatively low, and where we have the prospects for a cyclical outbreak in inflation. When we look at levels or activity outside the United States you have a situation where China is slowing. The Japanese economy is struggling. And in Europe there is tremendous amount of uncertainty.

So, there are certainly scenarios where if you had issues in any of those regions you would see pressure on the U.S. Now that could actually lead to a little bit more flexibility or a little bit less pressure on the inflation side. But too much pressure outside the United States can lead to much lower economic growth. So, we still live in a highly interconnected world. You can't look at any one region without understanding what's going on in other regions. Which is one of the reasons why our team and our group has expanded in terms of our focus over the course of the last several years, to make sure we are taking into account activities outside of this country that could have an impact on inflation and fixed-income valuation.

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Eric Jacobson

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Eric Jacobson is director of manager research, U.S. fixed-income strategies, for Morningstar Research Services LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Morningstar, Inc. He is a voting member of the Morningstar Medalist Ratings Committee for U.S. and international fixed-income strategies and shares responsibility for determining coverage and research priorities. Jacobson has focused on a variety of taxable, tax-exempt, and nontraditional fixed-income strategies, including several from asset managers such as Pimco, BlackRock, PGIM, and Guggenheim. He has also covered strategies from J.P. Morgan, Fidelity, Goldman Sachs, TCW, Vanguard, Loomis Sayles, Putnam, T. Rowe Price, American Century, Eaton Vance, FPA, and American Funds. He is the team's lead analyst on Pimco.

From 2006 through mid-2008, Jacobson was director of fixed-income strategies for Morningstar Indexes and was responsible for the design and launch of Morningstar's original suite of U.S., global, and emerging-markets bond indexes. Before assuming that role, he was a senior analyst, associate director, and fixed-income editorial director for the fund research team. Before joining the company in 1995 as a closed-end fund analyst, he worked for Kemper Financial Services.

Jacobson holds degrees in political science, Hebrew and Semitic studies, and integrated liberal studies from the University of Wisconsin.

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