Gundlach – The Psychology of a Rate Hike

Jeffrey Gundlach

The consensus is building for a Fed rate hike in December. But how the market will react is far less certain. According to Jeffrey Gundlach, that will depend on the context in which the Fed takes action.

Gundlach is the founder and chief investment officer of Los Angeles-based DoubleLine Capital. He spoke to investors via a conference call on November 9. Slides from that presentation are available here. The focus of his talk was DoubleLine’s closed-end funds, DBL and DSL.

Sentiment in favor of a rate hike increased following the release on November 6 of the employment report, which was generally viewed as indicative of accelerating economic growth.

Gundlach, however, cautioned against assuming that a rate increase is certain. If the Fed raises, he said its impact on the markets is even less certain.

“If the Fed raises the Fed funds rate against a backdrop where people come to believe that inflation pressures are growing, then they [the Fed] are behind the curve,” he said, and “the yield curve will steepen. The long bond under that scenario would not be happy.”

Prior to the November 6 jobs report, the likelihood of a rate increase was approximately 50%. Now, the market puts the odds at 70%. If the economic data between now and when the Fed meets in December does not show continued growth, then Gundlach said the long bond would rally.

“If the Fed raises interest rates, the shape of the curve will have everything to do with the economic context in which they raise interest rates,” he said.

I’ll look at Gundlach’s take on the jobs report and the factors at play in the bond market. I will also review his comments on a few sectors of the bond market.

Jobs, the economy and interest rates

Gundlach said the jobs report was not entirely positive despite the 271,000 increase in payrolls and the 2.5% growth in hourly earnings. The “asterisk” in the data was that most of the job growth came from those 55 and older; there were job losses for younger cohorts. He said the growth in 55-and-older employment was a consequence of zero-interest rate policy, which forced many to delay retirement.

The economic data released over the next month will dictate how the market will react to a Fed rate hike, Gundlach said.

If the Fed raises rates against a backdrop of largely unchanged data, which Gundlach said had been the speculation for the last 18 months, then he predicted that the long bond (30-year maturity) would rally. But if the data continues to support economic growth, then speculation will increase that the Fed is acting “behind the curve” and, according to Gundlach, volatility and yields will increase.

Gundlach said it was unlikely the Fed would engage in another round of quantitative easing if the economy were to weaken. If that happened, he said, it would first reverse any interest-rate increases it had undertaken and then go to negative yields, as has happened in Europe.