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Asset Management Amid Long-Term Inflation
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Please welcome the panel on Asset Management in incalculable
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times moderated by CNBC news.
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Anchor Sara Eisen.
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Hello, welcome everybody.
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I feel like we need cocktails at four not water. But thank you
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all for being here. And I don't think I need to introduce our steam panelists their
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names are going to be behind them. They're all very famous. If you follow the
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asset management industry in the world of Finance,
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so it's an honor for me to be here and to be talking about Asset Management
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in incalculable times.
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So speaking of the times that we're in today's a really interesting day
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to start a conversation about the environment
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given we had another bank failure this morning
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And rescue from JP Morgan we are in
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this weird Waiting for Godot recession period
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we're trying to figure out if we're in
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a bear Market or something else. So a lot of interesting questions. I'm hoping
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to tackle with some of you guys and what you're telling your clients. Maybe
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maybe Harvey you could just kick it off because you
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you've been through the trenches back at
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Goldman Sachs in 2008 2009 you're now Carlisle and
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New on the job. I should say. Congratulations. Thank you.
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so
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how big 65?
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Just 11 pounding.
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This is your coming out. So welcome. Thank you.
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How sturdy is our banking system right now?
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Do you think well for Sarah? It's great to be here and it's great to be here with
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the panel. I've known a number of them for many many years and it's
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great to see everybody out here in the audience.
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I think you know the question you really asking is.
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How resilient and how safe is the system yes today.
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And if you think about it versus 2008.
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Personally, I don't think this feels like 2008 at all.
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That's not the minimize how acute it feels or
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is and the fear that has
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been stimulated by the last couple of months.
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But if you really think about 2000 a verses today.
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leverage in the system was significantly different interconnectedness of
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major financial institutions was tremendously different
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asset concentration was different and
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the regulatory toolkit and the response
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much more limited versus today. So I think when you talk about the
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system the system to me particularly for large financials
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Fields, very very different.
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now
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the investing environment from the environment broadly
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I think this is one of the most complex times we've been in.
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And by that what I'm really talking about is if you zoom out and it's
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hard to zoom out. We have all these events happening when you
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zoom out.
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I think trends that many of us have lived with certainly my
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generation.
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in my lifetime
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interest rates have come down inflations. Come down globalizations occurred technology
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is been extraordinary that may
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be the only Trend that is still locked in place
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and
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many of the trends that we've lived with are certainly slowing
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if not reversing and I think that sets up an incredibly
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interesting backdrop both economically globally
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and in terms of an opportunity set.
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And when I think about for those of us on this panel over the
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next couple of years.
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I think that opportunity set to deploy Capital will be
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Unique, I think this recalibration of interest rates
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is just changing the cost of capital around the world
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and I think for our clients and
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our partners, there'll be very interesting opportunities, which
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will be a Tailwind for our industry. But I
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also think we'll be solution providers for capital in terms
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of helping fix the system.
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and I think today was a
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today was a good day for the system.
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And part of this process. Okay, because I what I really wanted to
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know if anyone else thinks that there's going to be more bank
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failures in this country. See I didn't hear the question
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that way.
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But I would have answered it which is what I
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think there could be more acute issues. But again,
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I think the resiliency of the system has been proven to
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be very very solid. I mean, we've had three bank failures in a couple
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of months and the system continues to prove that it can handle them.
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Even if we sometimes critique everybody involved
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and I think we sort of misunderstand the complexity
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of the solutions, but I think the system is demonstrating that
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it can handle and digest problems in a way that in the past
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wouldn't have been the case. You shouldn't do you feel better about
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the system after today.
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Well, you know, it's very interesting because obviously you've identified
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a lot of issues that are coming out all of us
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so fast.
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Yet when you look at, you know, the first quarter of this
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year, the vix has been incredibly low, right and
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the S&P 500 posted very solid results.
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But you know when you peer below the surface, it does
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appear that not all is well and good and it's not necessarily
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benign and there are three three key
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things that I would point to I think the first is that investors
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are not necessarily betting on the
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economy or the ultimate resiliency of the
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banking sector, although I think the news from JPMorgan actually boosted
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that
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But in many respects I think investors are betting on just the
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FED continuing to Fed cutting rates and we
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saw that pretty much with the most interest rate
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sensitive sector in the first quarter, which is Tech which
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posted what 20% plus returns and had
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it not done that the S&P 500 would have been instead of
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seven percent closer to 2.7 percent.
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Number two, I think this banking turmoil has
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had the effect and the FED has said as much as
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being equivalent to an interest rate hike and then
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some and then I think more to your point Sarah is
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when you look away from the financial sector and
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look at the business sector in general.
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And I think this is where the the impact of what
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is happening in the banking sector is impacted the broader
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economy.
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Because banking standards credit standards have gone up
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dramatically and they're today. It's something like
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2/3 of historical Peak cycles. And then
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seperately if you look at just balance sheets what you see
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is that short-term liabilities are well in excess of
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liquid assets and it is a gap that exceeds
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what we saw going into the great financial crisis. And
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so that's where I think the actual concern
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should be despite what it seems like the market is absorbing
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everything that's coming its way and sort of moving on from today's
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news to probably the debt ceiling and
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whatever else may come our way but in the end, I think
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there is more underneath the surface. It's potentially worrying and
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investors should be wary as we move forward.
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Katie, you know, I've conversations today at milk and
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a lot of a lot of especially with private Equity folks say
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this is a great opportunity because banks are
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going to pull back on lending especially to small and mid-sized businesses
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and private credit is going to play a really important
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role in our economy and and save all these businesses.
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Is that true
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I think
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private credit has a very important role to play here
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and we think it could be an incredible opportunity over
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the next decade. If you deploy the
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capital appropriately at the same time, I think
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that there is a possibility that we we have some bad accidents
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actually in the in the private credit space. So just as
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brief backdrop and content and context we would
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be at TCW we would be more in the camp of medium
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to hard Landing. I wish
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that wasn't the case because like Harvey I just started as
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a CEO and I'd like a better environment but doesn't look
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like we're going to have that in our first year.
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We can see as we like that smooth Landing. Yeah.
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I think we're going to get it, but you're also.
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You know TCW is a big bond shop and bond investors are always more pessimistic.
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Yeah. I know I'm learning that because I used to
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be such an optimist before but I'm optimistic
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that credit will perform. So I feel like from a career perspective that's been
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good timing. But really when you look at the
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future here, it's it's pretty it's
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pretty challenging. So just say something quickly on that and then I'll answer the question
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on private credit. We think, you know just a
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few things to point out. We've had a 15 year recovery. And
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so I think you'd agree like in the context
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of an investing career the longer that recovery and expansion usually
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the worst the correction because there's so much excess to work out
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of the system and last week for people who follow this money supply
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contracted the most that it has since the Great Depression, which is
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one way of looking at how much that has to contract the second
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thing. That's that's happening or we think it's gonna happen is a very
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sadly because there's a human impact that is
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a lot of job destruction and the locus for
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that's probably going to come through the regional Banks.
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Harvey pointed out the smaller and Regional Banks which could face trouble
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and the best way to explain that is that
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the gsids which we've talked about before and the
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one that bailed out a regional bank today. They're in a really good position. They
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actually are much better capitalized as
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Harvey pointed out than they were going into the last financial crisis and that's
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good news. And hopefully they'll be able to step up and act
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counter cyclically, but the regional and small banks are
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in a very tough spot because of the deposit flight
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and one thing that people here should really be aware of
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is that small Banks and Regional banks
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are incredibly important to small businesses and who are small
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businesses important to an America they contribute to half the
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GDP and half the employment and so when you get credit
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taken out of that part of the market, there's a very negative feedback towards
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towards job destruction. And then the third thing and I'll
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end with the common on private credit is that correct? The price
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of capital has been reprice very aggressively in
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a short period of time and whenever that happens stuff breaks.
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Had a few major things break. There's going to be more things that break
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ahead and two areas that we would really look at that were
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concerned about that. We're keeping a lot of dry powder because
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eventually there be an opportunity. But before that there's going to be accidents would
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be the commercial real estate market sadly also
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a problem for the regional Banks because they're large owners of it and the
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second would be private credit and I'll just end by saying like, yes,
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it's exciting. I know there's for the LPS and
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the audience there's a lot of people trying to sell you. I'm sure a private
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credit now, but what I would really think about is that do
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these managers, here's the questions, I would ask your manager are
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they using strong covenants covenants is
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what gives you a seat at the table when things go sideways and
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they're going to go sideways. So you want to see it at the table. The second
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is have they done a lot of diligence. We ran into a lot
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of deals where people were using the term diligence light
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that was fun five five years the last five
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years that's not going to be fun in the next five years for people that
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did diligent light under writing. These are really
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important things for making sure that you're going to be able to
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navigate this this next part of the cycle. But if you underwrite correctly,
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there should be great opportunities ahead. We're
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sitting on a lot of dry powder. We're going to deploy that and we're
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actually going to close on one of our largest direct lending closes yet
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in the history, but just remember that 96%
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of private credit managers started post Global financial
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crisis
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So there are many managers in this space that have only
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invested in a zero and low rate environment and we can
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all be Geniuses in a zero rate environment. Just ask us.
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We'll tell you.
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No, it's interesting because I've heard a lot of positive things about private credit today.
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And this is the first warning that I've gotten on it. Come all
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what about you? How how are you navigating? Especially some
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of these problems with banks which it sounds like from
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the panel everyone thinks. Okay. Today was today was helpful, but
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not necessarily feeling like everything's taken
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care of. Sure before I go there. Can I come
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to the rescue of my fixed income colleagues? I think you
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ask Katie that they are pessimistic lot. They might be pessimistic
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but they're a smart Bunch too. So that's fixed
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income for sure. Mike will agree with me. I appreciate that. I
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link up
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your questions because I think there is
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There's a commonality in your initial question on
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Banks and the credit cycle and I'll
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approach it from two standpoints one's a
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question you asked about the system. And then the
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other one is about what is really Lost in Translation in
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this Bank turmoil.
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So the first one on system I would say is we actually
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have structured the system in a very smart way you particularly look
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at the news today and the FDIC structure
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at the very simplest level is a co-op
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Insurance structure of Banks. And the reason
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that structure works. Well is obviously there tend
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to be bank failures, but the remaining cohort
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pays the future premium that
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doesn't really Force the pressure on
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taxpayers. So I think as a nation as a
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society, I think we've all that thinking around bank failures
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and I think I do give credit to how we've evolved
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it now do bank failures happen or not. But the more seminal question
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of the time is historic bank failures have
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been really failures of credit.
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And what has happened? I think in the last
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10 15 years is when rates were low.
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We really trained a lot of people to become credit
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experts in private credits an example of that.
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What we have really lost is the art of asset liability
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management. The failure of banks is
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the Lost Art of Alm management
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not an art of credit management and
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that's the skill set. We need to look towards in
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the market environment ahead of us.
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Like what about you? And by the way, I just want to remind everybody that please
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participate in the conversation. You can ask questions. I
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get them live with the QR code.
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Keep them coming in.
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Yeah, so I I guess I would say broadly about
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the markets right now one of the and bond folks are
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normally quite pessimistic. That is true. Although I would claim
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realism is a little better term. But but
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I would say right now there's a lot that we
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know.
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So if you ask us all what's troubling we'll say
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Russia and Ukraine.
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We'll say inflation is sticky.
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Commercial real estate is a concern.
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The consumers fading in their strength will say a
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lot of things in we know those.
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What we'd also say is there is so much cash on the
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sidelines.
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There if you ask the largest wealth managers 15 to
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20% of their system is in cash. If you
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look at money funds there's five trillion dollars in cash
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now.
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Four and a half percent as a heck of a lot better than zero. So there's their earning
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money on cash. But when you have that much cash on
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the sidelines and that much pessimism built into the
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system, you can tell why markets are somewhat resilient
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right now and there's going to be a lot of opportunities for cash in the
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bond markets in particular. You can look at one two,
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three year duration high quality fixed income and earn five
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and a quarter five and a half percent.
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If the Fed does cut in the next couple of years by
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150 or 200 basis points you get a Tailwind of
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owning duration and your total return over two years could be something like 13
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14 percent that's for owning high quality short
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duration paper. So there's there's a lot of concern out
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there, but there's also a lot of opportunity
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Well, which which brings us to another question that we wanted to tackle here,
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which is first of all should you be in cash right now? Should you
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band fixed income should you be an equities sounds
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like some of you are pretty worried about the equity
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Market
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yishun, what are you what do you think?
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Well, you know, I do think this is one of the most difficult environments to
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try to predict where we're going to go or to forecast. You know,
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what the future looks like, you know, one thing that we've been
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paying attention to is similar to what Mike
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you've been talking about our how our investors postured and
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you know, we see that individual investors having
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plowed tons into the market in the
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beginning half of February almost a record levels have
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really pulled back ever since the class of Silicon
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Valley bank, and they have really nowhere to be seen
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today.
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And then if you look at the Institutional Investor universe and we have really good
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visibility into it because State Street is
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one of the largest custodians in the world. And so we're able
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to see we're investors Holdings are largely
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where flows are going. And in fact tomorrow. I
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think we're launching two new indicators one is
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institutional Holdings indicator, and then the other is risk
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appetite.
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And so what we're seeing on the ground versus maybe where
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you know where we suggest investors should go
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it's number one. I would say there's not a lot of panic in
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the investors Holdings. They have
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sold off financials. But only about a quarter
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of what they did and prior Peak
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cycles and then similarly we're seeing
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them still stay invested in equities. They're just transitioning
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to more defensive heart quality.
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Um companies secondly to Mike's Point.
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There is an enormous amount of cash. We see it. But the
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difference is back in 2020 the
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onset of the pandemic we saw institutions drawing down
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on that excess cash and buying into the market supporting
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the rally. We don't see any of that activity today.
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And then lastly looking at investor flows, which
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is really what supports are sort of risk
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appetite indicator.
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And what we've seen is that investors have moved away from risk seeking
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to risk aversion and they've been in this posture
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for something close to 80 days, which is the longest
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that we've seen really since 2015.
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And typically when this indicator is as red as it
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is, you would see the vix somewhere closer to 2x
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what it is today.
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And so what I would say is that, you know investors on
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balance are staying invested in the market, but whatever
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Capital they may have on the sidelines are willingness
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to move into areas. It's much more reticent. And
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so that's something to watch as we go along as to
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what that behavior will be is as things unfold.
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Mike what do you think the mountain of cash? I mean,
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it does make sense you're getting paid for it. Yeah, I think
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if you had to choose between cash and
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Short to intermediate duration high quality bonds. I would
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choose the latter because you can pick up income and you can also position
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yourself to benefit from the rally and duration. So
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I would own active short duration fixed income
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instead.
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The other thing I'd say is you that's not three month two bills. They're
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not having a good run right now. We can do
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better. Yeah, and then the other the other thing I'd
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say is
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you know last year if you looked at every headline it would talk about
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the death of 60 40 and I would argue that
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death has been greatly exaggerated. If you
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look at something like our Flagship balance strategy
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American balance fund. It's returned over eight percent over
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10 years annualized and over 8% 20 years annualized last
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year was a terrible year for fixed income inequities.
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It was the first year both asset classes were down at the same
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time in 40 years.
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Is 60/40 as just a general concept of balance
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going to be a good strategy for the next five years, I'd argue
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it will be so I I would we talked a
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lot about short duration fixed income in lieu of cash. I would also
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suggest think back to balance.
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And then the last thing I think Katie had a really good point on private credit
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I think of it is one of the very few islands.
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That only has tourists.
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And it's you know, there's actually I have to
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just say that because I see my head of private credit sitting back
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there and he's been doing this since 2001 so there is one. Okay,
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but but your stat is there Rick Miller
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you can meet him after this but when your stat is right the vast
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majority of participants are new to the asset class.
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It's going to be a fine asset class over the long term in
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the short term. Some of the older vintages have some
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real Covenant challenges and a lot of the participants haven't
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worked themself through a real Financial challenging period
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of time.
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Come on, what 60 40 still work?
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Yeah, I worked really well last year did not work last
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year. Yeah, so it's working this year. Yeah, that's
404
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exactly the point which is
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So first, I think we had made it almost painful
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to hold cash.
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Which is just a bad idea, you know, I think everybody should have
408
00:21:20,200 --> 00:21:24,100
some amount of cash and we systematically over the
409
00:21:23,500 --> 00:21:26,400
last decade made it almost painful to hold cash.
410
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So I'm glad what we have done is the Pain's gone
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away. It's there's a little bit of joy in holding cash, which is good. But let
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me go to the 60/40 question because that's a really good way to think
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about it Sarah.
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So so take a step back and imagine we work
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with a lot of investors globally and over 80 countries.
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And most of these investors who control where money
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is in motion.
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on average most of these people want a seven to
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eight percent return over a long period
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and
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what we had done is for them to get seven or eight
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percent and if cash or short
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duration fixed income was 0%
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We almost force them to go seek something that
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generated 20% return because how do you
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get to a blend of eight percent?
427
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And what that did was they was an absolute
428
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boom in the growth of venture capital not just
429
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in America, but in Asia and Europe, there was an absolute
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boom in all forms of private Equity across the world.
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This acceleration to those asset classes was explicitly
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before because they wanted to get to 8% and
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zero was anchoring it.
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Now think about it today that zero has become
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5%
436
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their need for eight percent hasn't changed. So what does
437
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that mean? They don't need to chase 20% They could
438
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do 10% And so the
439
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the second order thinking you have to bring in is
440
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where does the tide received and where can
441
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the tide stay now? And I would argue in the
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world we live in the tide is going to recede in
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things like Venture Capital. It's receding in private
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equity.
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It may actually come to some form of private credit because
446
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the net return of private credit and obviously
447
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you have to do your credit work. You can paint it with a broad
448
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brush, but that seems to be in the right zip code of
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what these investors want. I would argue public equities
450
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General Global public equities with an
451
00:23:32,200 --> 00:23:35,900
eight to ten percent risk profile are in the perfect zip
452
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code for these clients. So I think the 60/40
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concept has to be thought in terms of what these
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00:23:41,800 --> 00:23:45,300
investors want and where they want to where they were
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where they don't want to be and where they're going to park their money. So my
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00:23:48,400 --> 00:23:51,500
view would be public equities are in cash is in
457
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For certain forms of credit board public and private are
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in the real issue is long duration
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highly leveraged Equity is the real
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issue in the economy.
461
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I feel like he invoked private Equity not in the best way.
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Harvey not it wasn't in it wasn't one of the inn and well the
463
00:24:11,300 --> 00:24:14,500
first thing I feel they need to defend my team only because you
464
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pointed out your team but Marc Jenkins Mark. Jacob
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is doing this for 20 years. So I don't know where the tourists are.
466
00:24:20,400 --> 00:24:23,400
We have a lot of respect but that's worth aren't at Carlisle just to be
467
00:24:23,400 --> 00:24:27,700
clear but my dreams your team because we're Carlisle probably right? We're
468
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on the same team.
469
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Well, the first thing I'm going to say is.
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I don't know how common it is that a panel tends to generally sort
471
00:24:35,100 --> 00:24:38,300
of circle around a consensus, but it does
472
00:24:38,100 --> 00:24:41,400
feel like there's a bit of a consensus and I try to avoid that actually.
473
00:24:41,100 --> 00:24:44,500
No, I know I'll try and help you in a second, but I think
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that
475
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You know if we were all sitting here a year year and a half
476
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ago and you described if you said everybody close your
477
00:24:52,800 --> 00:24:53,100
eyes.
478
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What do you think the world's going to be? Like if the FED raises nearly 5%
479
00:24:57,200 --> 00:25:00,800
we have multiple bank failures. There's a
480
00:25:00,500 --> 00:25:02,600
consolidation between the two Swiss banks.
481
00:25:03,500 --> 00:25:06,400
Again, I think we'd be somewhat surprised.
482
00:25:07,400 --> 00:25:11,200
At where we are in terms of 60 40 portfolio performance
483
00:25:10,500 --> 00:25:15,100
liquidity state of the system, but what?
484
00:25:16,000 --> 00:25:19,900
Sometimes feels a little bit reminiscent of the 2008 crisis
485
00:25:19,700 --> 00:25:22,900
going by the first question. It's just fear is high confidence is
486
00:25:22,700 --> 00:25:23,000
low.
487
00:25:24,100 --> 00:25:27,300
And personally I think that makes a lot of sense. And so
488
00:25:27,100 --> 00:25:31,200
I think what a lot of us are saying and Mike and
489
00:25:31,000 --> 00:25:34,100
I go way back. I think we're saying it's a time
490
00:25:34,000 --> 00:25:37,200
for discipline and a disciplined approach to deploying capital.
491
00:25:37,000 --> 00:25:40,100
I know that's how the team at Carlisle is thinking about
492
00:25:40,000 --> 00:25:40,900
it now.
493
00:25:42,300 --> 00:25:43,800
how this recalibration of
494
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Literally the global capital structure occurs. I think
495
00:25:47,600 --> 00:25:50,700
for sure. Katie has to be right. There'll be
496
00:25:50,700 --> 00:25:54,900
some problems in previously deployed credit, but the return
497
00:25:54,400 --> 00:25:58,400
opportunities will be extraordinary and to come
498
00:25:57,900 --> 00:26:01,000
all his point the opportunity or an eight or ten percent
499
00:26:00,900 --> 00:26:04,200
on a different risk adjusted basis will be
500
00:26:04,100 --> 00:26:08,000
enormous for Market participants, but it doesn't have to be today and
501
00:26:07,100 --> 00:26:11,400
the wall of capital doesn't have to be put to work today, but
502
00:26:10,100 --> 00:26:13,200
I think the opportunity sets there and I
503
00:26:13,200 --> 00:26:16,400
think while private Equity will also go through a
504
00:26:16,200 --> 00:26:19,400
bit of a repricing and as we all know massive amounts of
505
00:26:19,400 --> 00:26:22,800
capital going on in a private Equity, I think private Equity. Well it
506
00:26:22,500 --> 00:26:25,900
may pause I think private Equity will continue to grow because I
507
00:26:25,800 --> 00:26:29,200
think the trend around the world and the demand for private Capital
508
00:26:28,800 --> 00:26:32,000
whether it's private Equity or fixed income. I just think
509
00:26:31,800 --> 00:26:33,200
that trend is in place.
510
00:26:34,000 --> 00:26:37,800
One thing I feel like we're sort of talking around is the rate environment and yes,
511
00:26:37,000 --> 00:26:40,000
we've gone from zero to five percent a really fast.
512
00:26:41,000 --> 00:26:44,200
An aggressive way I'd say from the fed and and the question
513
00:26:44,000 --> 00:26:47,500
of what comes next is pretty interesting because now the Market's pricing
514
00:26:47,300 --> 00:26:50,700
in actual cuts that it goes down one reason. It's held
515
00:26:50,300 --> 00:26:53,500
up and everyone here. I talked to at the Milken conference
516
00:26:53,300 --> 00:26:56,900
thinks that inflation is stickier and the fed's going to have to keep raising
517
00:26:56,400 --> 00:26:58,900
and stay restrictive and I'm curious.
518
00:27:00,400 --> 00:27:03,600
How you calculate how you guys are are thinking of that and how
519
00:27:03,600 --> 00:27:07,700
it fits in with your hard Landing view. We medium to
520
00:27:07,600 --> 00:27:12,800
hard just medium to Heart together a little bit of but we
521
00:27:12,600 --> 00:27:15,500
think that we will that's how I have my hard-boiled eggs.
522
00:27:16,500 --> 00:27:19,900
We think that we'll probably get a rate rise this
523
00:27:19,700 --> 00:27:23,000
week of a quarter point. There is
524
00:27:23,000 --> 00:27:26,900
still inflationary signs. We know that the FED basis
525
00:27:26,400 --> 00:27:29,600
some of these decisions on lagging indicators, which take some
526
00:27:29,400 --> 00:27:33,600
time to get caught up and we haven't seen massive
527
00:27:32,800 --> 00:27:36,300
demand destruction yet. So that would be the core view
528
00:27:36,200 --> 00:27:40,100
to wait and then digest and see what see what happens next obviously by
529
00:27:39,800 --> 00:27:43,100
definition since I said that we are going to have a
530
00:27:42,900 --> 00:27:47,300
you know, our view as a medium to hard Landing we would expect more
531
00:27:46,200 --> 00:27:50,000
softening in the future. I I sorry
532
00:27:49,400 --> 00:27:52,500
to cut you up. What is a medium to hard Landing. What does that
533
00:27:52,400 --> 00:27:55,700
mean? Just meaning that a lot of people think the recession would be short-lived but
534
00:27:55,600 --> 00:27:59,000
we just think it will be more challenging than that and I want to connect just to
535
00:27:58,800 --> 00:28:02,100
one point you're asking people about ask that allocation and
536
00:28:01,900 --> 00:28:05,400
whether we should be in cash or not and I
537
00:28:05,100 --> 00:28:08,400
I just want to observe that because you can kind of get a
538
00:28:08,100 --> 00:28:11,600
good sense of consent is that these conferences I still
539
00:28:11,300 --> 00:28:15,500
think people are to happy here like
540
00:28:14,600 --> 00:28:16,200
I think the mood
541
00:28:16,500 --> 00:28:20,000
A little bit too good don't you feel like people are still well, you're
542
00:28:19,700 --> 00:28:21,500
doing a pretty good job bringing it down. Yeah.
543
00:28:22,100 --> 00:28:26,000
I don't feel as good now. Yeah.
544
00:28:26,900 --> 00:28:30,000
I don't know Mike how do you feel? I feel great Harvey. Thank you.
545
00:28:30,000 --> 00:28:33,200
I just like, you know, I just feels like a little bit
546
00:28:33,000 --> 00:28:36,100
to things are. Okay, and we made the point
547
00:28:36,100 --> 00:28:39,100
that we think more things will break worth the early stage of that. But I I
548
00:28:39,100 --> 00:28:42,600
would make the observation to you that you had
549
00:28:42,200 --> 00:28:45,700
mentioned that the vix hasn't gone where you would think it would given some
550
00:28:45,600 --> 00:28:49,300
of the news flow and credit spreads also haven't widen dramatically either
551
00:28:49,000 --> 00:28:52,300
and personally. I just wanted to answer that question by
552
00:28:52,000 --> 00:28:55,400
saying that for individuals. I think it would be wise to
553
00:28:55,200 --> 00:28:59,300
keep some cash ready to deploy and for institutions also
554
00:28:58,700 --> 00:29:02,300
and for the way that we manage our portfolios, we want
555
00:29:01,900 --> 00:29:04,900
to keep a lot of dry powder because I do think you know
556
00:29:04,900 --> 00:29:08,500
things will get worse and they'll be massive opportunities. It is
557
00:29:08,400 --> 00:29:12,000
absolutely true that the greatest wealth creation
558
00:29:11,600 --> 00:29:15,400
opportunities happen coming out of a recession and
559
00:29:14,900 --> 00:29:18,000
we're just we're just not there yet and there needs to
560
00:29:18,000 --> 00:29:21,600
be more access worked out of the system. So I would strongly encourage people
561
00:29:21,200 --> 00:29:24,300
to sit on that drive powder and
562
00:29:24,200 --> 00:29:26,400
wait for things to play out and there should be
563
00:29:26,800 --> 00:29:30,000
Some incredible investment opportunities. We talked about commercial real estate.
564
00:29:29,800 --> 00:29:33,100
I'll just end by saying that hasn't gotten
565
00:29:32,800 --> 00:29:36,400
as bad as it's going to get that will get a lot worse before it
566
00:29:36,000 --> 00:29:39,100
gets better. And and that's something that could take
567
00:29:39,000 --> 00:29:42,200
a long time to play out. They'll be a long long tail to that
568
00:29:42,100 --> 00:29:45,500
investment opportunity. And so we want to be ready to capitalize on it before
569
00:29:45,200 --> 00:29:48,300
we move on from cash. We were getting too good questions and
570
00:29:48,200 --> 00:29:51,500
they're both exactly the same from Anonymous and
571
00:29:51,300 --> 00:29:55,000
attendee 7, which is what really
572
00:29:54,600 --> 00:29:58,300
take to get trillions of dollars of cash off
573
00:29:57,600 --> 00:30:01,500
the sidelines Mike. You raise. Yeah point. It's
574
00:30:00,900 --> 00:30:04,300
already coming. I mean if you look even
575
00:30:03,900 --> 00:30:07,100
just using us, you're today, we're seeing an average
576
00:30:06,900 --> 00:30:10,100
of about 500 million in net new flows into the bond
577
00:30:09,900 --> 00:30:13,700
market. It's a capital group per week. It's coming. So
578
00:30:12,900 --> 00:30:16,000
I I think what it takes is where's it going
579
00:30:15,900 --> 00:30:19,200
into? It's it's not going into high yield yet.
580
00:30:18,900 --> 00:30:22,800
It is going into high quality short to intermediate duration
581
00:30:22,300 --> 00:30:25,800
bonds, so it's not coming into equities yet,
582
00:30:25,600 --> 00:30:26,500
and it's not going.
583
00:30:26,900 --> 00:30:30,400
High yield yet, but doing a hundred basis points
584
00:30:30,200 --> 00:30:33,700
better than cash and owning a bit more duration than zero is
585
00:30:33,600 --> 00:30:36,800
where where the cash is going. And I think you'll see that continue. I
586
00:30:36,600 --> 00:30:39,900
think I think you'll see a trillion dollars flow back
587
00:30:39,800 --> 00:30:43,200
into the bond markets in the next few years and you know
588
00:30:43,200 --> 00:30:46,900
5% a heck of a lot better than a zero interest rate policy and
589
00:30:46,600 --> 00:30:50,700
experimental monetary policy that we saw for gosh 13
590
00:30:50,400 --> 00:30:53,700
years. So I I think it's coming and I think you'll see it accelerate.
591
00:30:54,400 --> 00:30:58,800
Kamal how are you guys positioning around the the fed and the
592
00:30:57,900 --> 00:30:59,200
Outlook?
593
00:30:59,900 --> 00:31:03,200
Yeah, so I think simple answer
594
00:31:02,900 --> 00:31:06,700
is I think Sarah inflation is stubborn growth
595
00:31:05,900 --> 00:31:07,200
is fleeting.
596
00:31:07,800 --> 00:31:12,200
And that's a very difficult environment to manage to and to
597
00:31:11,700 --> 00:31:14,900
your point on recession and then I'll go to how you think about that from
598
00:31:14,700 --> 00:31:18,900
an investment standpoint. You know, this recession is
599
00:31:18,300 --> 00:31:21,900
is complicated and it's
600
00:31:21,700 --> 00:31:24,100
complicated in a simple way if you think about it.
601
00:31:25,100 --> 00:31:28,500
I think almost everybody in this room will feel this
602
00:31:28,400 --> 00:31:29,100
recession.
603
00:31:29,800 --> 00:31:33,200
Because this is a Services recession that's coming upon
604
00:31:32,800 --> 00:31:33,400
us.
605
00:31:34,100 --> 00:31:36,500
the way our economy has grown is
606
00:31:37,100 --> 00:31:40,600
we sort of left the natural comfort of
607
00:31:40,300 --> 00:31:43,400
manufacturing, you know, the the ratio of
608
00:31:43,300 --> 00:31:47,500
blue collar White Collar jobs in the economy reversed and
609
00:31:46,900 --> 00:31:51,500
so as the broad American economy particularly
610
00:31:50,300 --> 00:31:53,900
in lot of well-paying jobs became a
611
00:31:53,500 --> 00:31:54,900
Services economy.
612
00:31:55,700 --> 00:31:59,200
The recession upon us is going to hit Services the hardest.
613
00:32:00,200 --> 00:32:03,500
Yet the people on the other side you see this with the
614
00:32:03,300 --> 00:32:06,500
PMI data manufacturing is rebounding. We are
615
00:32:06,300 --> 00:32:09,900
bringing Capital back. You know, there is a sort of an anti globalization
616
00:32:09,400 --> 00:32:13,200
Trend you sort of look at leisure statistics,
617
00:32:12,700 --> 00:32:16,100
you know, you walk outside this room people out.
618
00:32:15,700 --> 00:32:18,700
There are probably never going to feel a recession over the next
619
00:32:18,700 --> 00:32:23,200
three years. And so what you have to process is you're
620
00:32:22,100 --> 00:32:26,000
going to see two economies. You can
621
00:32:25,300 --> 00:32:29,100
see a recession in the service economy yet. They'll
622
00:32:28,700 --> 00:32:31,900
be parts of economy that won't feel a recession and so
623
00:32:31,800 --> 00:32:35,100
as an investor you now have to think how do
624
00:32:34,900 --> 00:32:39,300
I invest for that sort of bifurcated economy
625
00:32:38,700 --> 00:32:42,700
and our view is is twofold.
626
00:32:43,800 --> 00:32:47,700
I think there's going to be a lot of positioning in defensive
627
00:32:47,000 --> 00:32:50,600
Industries. There's going to be a Renaissance
628
00:32:50,100 --> 00:32:53,900
in what I think of as
629
00:32:53,300 --> 00:32:56,500
small cap investing in this country. If you
630
00:32:56,400 --> 00:33:00,700
look at the GDP construct of America a lot
631
00:33:00,700 --> 00:33:04,800
of those Industries who benefit in this market cycle will tend
632
00:33:04,300 --> 00:33:07,700
to be smaller companies under leverage smaller companies
633
00:33:07,500 --> 00:33:11,000
are going to do well so to the point you heard here that's
634
00:33:10,600 --> 00:33:14,100
where I think Equity flows are going to go to your
635
00:33:14,000 --> 00:33:17,600
question on cash. You know, we are new to this environment.
636
00:33:17,100 --> 00:33:20,200
We are a big investor in Brazil. We run a big business
637
00:33:20,100 --> 00:33:23,800
there and if you look at Brazil, it's one of those economies
638
00:33:23,100 --> 00:33:26,800
that has dealt with inflation for as long
639
00:33:26,600 --> 00:33:30,100
as I know and if you look at investor behavior in
640
00:33:29,900 --> 00:33:31,100
a place like Brazil,
641
00:33:31,900 --> 00:33:35,000
What you see is investors tend to hold a lot
642
00:33:34,900 --> 00:33:38,300
of cash economies that have high inflation and
643
00:33:38,100 --> 00:33:41,500
we do have some stubborn inflation people love cash for
644
00:33:41,200 --> 00:33:45,300
a while. And what they tend to do is then they
645
00:33:44,900 --> 00:33:48,400
will make trade-off decisions. So they kind of mentally put
646
00:33:48,100 --> 00:33:51,400
their cash bucket separate from their equity and fixed and
647
00:33:51,300 --> 00:33:54,600
come bucket and I think we are coming upon times in Asset Management
648
00:33:54,400 --> 00:33:57,500
in America. You're going to see a lot of that so there is a
649
00:33:57,400 --> 00:34:00,600
place for fixed income but it's not the same way. We have
650
00:34:00,400 --> 00:34:04,000
thought about investing before on the economy. You should
651
00:34:03,900 --> 00:34:06,600
I'm wondering where where you are on the spectrum of
652
00:34:07,600 --> 00:34:10,800
Soft Landing medium landing hard landing and I'm
653
00:34:10,600 --> 00:34:14,700
going to add in a question here that relates to it specifically about
654
00:34:14,500 --> 00:34:17,700
the consumer and Consumer Debt from the audience. Thank you at an
655
00:34:17,500 --> 00:34:21,600
all-time high somewhere around 1.2 trillion and record low record
656
00:34:20,700 --> 00:34:24,100
low consumer savings and arising rate environment.
657
00:34:23,700 --> 00:34:27,000
How can there be anything but a hard Landing?
658
00:34:27,800 --> 00:34:29,000
so I would say we
659
00:34:30,200 --> 00:34:34,800
Let's see, we we think that
660
00:34:34,600 --> 00:34:37,700
there's going to be one more raid hike and we'll see
661
00:34:37,600 --> 00:34:40,900
that obviously very soon and then the question will be exactly what is
662
00:34:40,800 --> 00:34:44,500
a Fed gonna signal, you know for what's to come on
663
00:34:43,800 --> 00:34:47,200
balance. We think that you know,
664
00:34:47,100 --> 00:34:50,900
the economy is likely in 2024 to grow modestly
665
00:34:50,200 --> 00:34:53,400
sub one percent and that's
666
00:34:53,200 --> 00:34:56,500
the same. I mean that we get additional rate Cuts coming into
667
00:34:56,200 --> 00:34:59,500
this year called 50 basis points and then potentially another
668
00:34:59,400 --> 00:35:00,800
200 basis points.
669
00:35:01,500 --> 00:35:05,600
Next year, I think on the question about the consumer.
670
00:35:04,800 --> 00:35:08,100
We actually see it a little bit differently. We think
671
00:35:07,900 --> 00:35:11,800
that the consumer and consumers spending is in actually
672
00:35:11,100 --> 00:35:14,900
pretty decent shape labor is holding up. Well, we
673
00:35:14,100 --> 00:35:17,700
think household finances are actually in decent
674
00:35:17,400 --> 00:35:21,300
shape and of course real wages have been increasing so we
675
00:35:20,500 --> 00:35:23,600
don't necessarily subscribe to that view on the
676
00:35:23,600 --> 00:35:27,300
consumer end. I did talk earlier about you know concerns that
677
00:35:27,100 --> 00:35:27,600
we have.
678
00:35:28,700 --> 00:35:32,200
Sort of in the business sector of your call small to medium-sized companies
679
00:35:31,900 --> 00:35:36,000
and seeing more cracks there, you know
680
00:35:36,000 --> 00:35:39,400
at the end of the day, I think it is still and I'm glad that there's
681
00:35:39,100 --> 00:35:42,300
a lot of debate here because I think when you know,
682
00:35:42,200 --> 00:35:45,600
you read the popular process always a discussion of when is effect
683
00:35:45,200 --> 00:35:48,500
going to start cutting and you know, is it a hard Landing soft Landing,
684
00:35:48,200 --> 00:35:50,000
but it's more or less than the same direction.
685
00:35:51,200 --> 00:35:54,600
And what we see actually in some of the data that we track we
686
00:35:54,400 --> 00:35:58,000
follow something like 250 real-time signals around
687
00:35:57,800 --> 00:36:00,900
inflation and to kamal's point.
688
00:36:00,800 --> 00:36:04,900
I do think that there is some elements that are pretty sticky today when
689
00:36:04,000 --> 00:36:07,200
we look at clothing when we look
690
00:36:07,000 --> 00:36:10,600
at Healthcare. These are costs
691
00:36:10,000 --> 00:36:14,700
that are well above the 10 year average similarly food
692
00:36:14,400 --> 00:36:18,100
costs have not come down to pre-pandemic levels. And so
693
00:36:18,000 --> 00:36:21,400
I think it's worth investors thinking about a potential environment
694
00:36:21,000 --> 00:36:24,300
where we have sustained inflation and
695
00:36:24,000 --> 00:36:27,600
sustained higher interest rates and that could be with or without
696
00:36:27,300 --> 00:36:29,000
some level of growth.
697
00:36:29,700 --> 00:36:33,000
And thinking about overall portfolios, perhaps not
698
00:36:32,900 --> 00:36:36,600
in the 60/40 mix but really thinking along different factors.
699
00:36:36,000 --> 00:36:39,700
So the growth Dimension the inflation Dimension and
700
00:36:39,500 --> 00:36:42,900
having different aspects of the portfolio
701
00:36:42,500 --> 00:36:45,800
that's going to perform in those environments. So for in a lower growth,
702
00:36:45,500 --> 00:36:49,100
does that mean a higher quality bent to the portfolio of
703
00:36:48,700 --> 00:36:52,400
higher inflation environment a greater Commodities
704
00:36:51,900 --> 00:36:53,000
exposure?
705
00:36:54,400 --> 00:36:57,700
In terms of what it takes to get money off the sidelines into the
706
00:36:57,500 --> 00:37:00,700
market. I'm I think we need to get to a place
707
00:37:00,500 --> 00:37:04,100
where there's much more clarity about the path
708
00:37:03,600 --> 00:37:06,900
ahead whether it's higher or lower. I think
709
00:37:06,800 --> 00:37:10,100
that's the time when we see much more money moving into the
710
00:37:09,900 --> 00:37:13,400
market. And in the meantime our view is that this
711
00:37:13,100 --> 00:37:16,600
is more of a Trader's Market if you have liquidity and
712
00:37:16,300 --> 00:37:19,400
liquidity is a premium today being able to
713
00:37:19,300 --> 00:37:22,900
deploy that in the private markets is opportunities arise
714
00:37:22,300 --> 00:37:25,900
whether that's in the distressed Arena or opportunistic private
715
00:37:25,600 --> 00:37:28,700
credit or even secondaries and even in the
716
00:37:28,600 --> 00:37:32,300
public markets, I mean we've seen really quick moves
717
00:37:31,700 --> 00:37:35,500
in terms of dynamic dislocations, right how
718
00:37:35,200 --> 00:37:39,100
you'll spreads blue out last year. We saw treasuries
719
00:37:38,200 --> 00:37:41,800
yielding about 4% much lower today.
720
00:37:41,500 --> 00:37:44,800
And so having that sort of view around the
721
00:37:44,600 --> 00:37:47,900
portfolio thinking about different environments that we
722
00:37:47,800 --> 00:37:51,100
could find ourselves in maintaining that
723
00:37:50,900 --> 00:37:54,000
dry powder to take advantage of these opportunities.
724
00:37:54,400 --> 00:37:57,800
Present themselves, but they come very quickly and then being
725
00:37:57,500 --> 00:38:00,700
in a position to Pivot is sort of the way that we're thinking about
726
00:38:00,500 --> 00:38:01,000
the world.
727
00:38:02,100 --> 00:38:04,000
Harvey when does the FED cut rates
728
00:38:06,300 --> 00:38:09,700
So the interesting thing I find about the FED discussion is
729
00:38:09,400 --> 00:38:12,600
that it's often. Will they cut rates in a quarter or
730
00:38:12,400 --> 00:38:15,600
two quarters? And I think when I think about that when we talk
731
00:38:15,500 --> 00:38:18,300
about that internally, I think the right way to think about it is
732
00:38:19,600 --> 00:38:22,800
the Fed chairman J pal. He has a really
733
00:38:22,800 --> 00:38:23,600
odd job.
734
00:38:24,500 --> 00:38:24,800
and
735
00:38:26,200 --> 00:38:29,500
I think the the difficulty in that job is really been expressed by
736
00:38:29,400 --> 00:38:32,800
everyone on this panel, which is just tremendous degree of uncertainty.
737
00:38:33,700 --> 00:38:37,300
On the one hand. It's like a tug of war on the one hand you have inflation. He
738
00:38:36,700 --> 00:38:39,800
has to fight and another and he has Market stability.
739
00:38:40,800 --> 00:38:44,200
And he will have be forced to toggle back and forth between those
740
00:38:43,900 --> 00:38:44,800
two things.
741
00:38:45,900 --> 00:38:49,900
And along the way probably take undoubtedly a lot of unwarranted criticism
742
00:38:49,600 --> 00:38:52,700
for both because that's what we
743
00:38:52,600 --> 00:38:56,400
tend to do is a society but but I digress yeah,
744
00:38:55,900 --> 00:38:58,900
no, he has a hard job. And so
745
00:39:00,700 --> 00:39:02,300
I don't think the FED knows.
746
00:39:03,200 --> 00:39:06,300
I don't think they should know because uncertainty is high and I
747
00:39:06,300 --> 00:39:09,700
think it's all going to be about the data and I think in the
748
00:39:09,700 --> 00:39:12,800
near term they'll be caution. So I think we
749
00:39:12,700 --> 00:39:17,100
could again consensus on the panel sounds like roughly one
750
00:39:16,900 --> 00:39:20,000
hike that's what we think then a pause but it'll be
751
00:39:19,900 --> 00:39:20,400
data driven.
752
00:39:21,300 --> 00:39:23,700
Now when we look at our consumer data.
753
00:39:24,500 --> 00:39:28,100
Some of the consumer data is very positive. Yes credit
754
00:39:27,500 --> 00:39:31,100
card debt is back up to pre-pandemic levels, but the
755
00:39:30,700 --> 00:39:33,900
average mortgage rate for trillions of mortgages in the US is three
756
00:39:33,800 --> 00:39:38,000
and a half percent. That's an amazing cushion for the consumer it
757
00:39:36,900 --> 00:39:40,100
now it's it's a problem for the lender but it's
758
00:39:40,000 --> 00:39:43,300
an amazing cushion for the consumer in America. And when
759
00:39:43,100 --> 00:39:46,800
we look at our data our April activity data for our consumer
760
00:39:46,400 --> 00:39:49,700
businesses was up 2% That's mostly
761
00:39:49,500 --> 00:39:53,000
focused in travel Leisure experiences areas, you
762
00:39:52,900 --> 00:39:56,500
would think but I think and we think this inflation
763
00:39:56,000 --> 00:39:59,700
is probably going to be stickier now could a
764
00:39:59,300 --> 00:40:00,500
debate. Yes.
765
00:40:02,400 --> 00:40:06,300
This again gets to the point of the uncertainty. So I'll make
766
00:40:06,100 --> 00:40:07,600
two final observations and
767
00:40:08,400 --> 00:40:11,500
listen to everybody's been fantastic. I think one thing
768
00:40:11,400 --> 00:40:14,800
I would say is that in terms of what brings Capital to the
769
00:40:14,600 --> 00:40:17,000
market is always the same thing. It's confidence.
770
00:40:17,900 --> 00:40:21,800
In 2009, they had the bank stress tests. And literally
771
00:40:21,300 --> 00:40:24,800
that was one of the turning points where capital and
772
00:40:24,600 --> 00:40:28,100
confidence came back into the marketplace when quantitative easing
773
00:40:27,600 --> 00:40:28,600
was announced.
774
00:40:29,400 --> 00:40:30,600
Most people were scared of it.
775
00:40:31,400 --> 00:40:34,700
It was misunderstood and they liked it and they liked
776
00:40:34,600 --> 00:40:38,500
it a lot. Then we liked it way too much. It was like cake if
777
00:40:37,600 --> 00:40:40,900
you've never had cake before but I'm a food guy. So anyway,
778
00:40:40,700 --> 00:40:42,800
the I think that
779
00:40:44,100 --> 00:40:47,500
confidence will return maybe it's the all clear but when
780
00:40:47,300 --> 00:40:50,600
there's some sense of mortgage stability and a real clear path on
781
00:40:50,500 --> 00:40:51,500
inflation and rates.
782
00:40:52,800 --> 00:40:55,800
I don't think anybody knows exactly when that is we think it'll take
783
00:40:55,800 --> 00:40:58,800
a little longer. Now. The other observation I would make is
784
00:40:59,800 --> 00:41:03,000
not all capitals created equally, I think you just
785
00:41:02,800 --> 00:41:04,000
said it to Traders Market.
786
00:41:05,100 --> 00:41:05,500
and
787
00:41:07,100 --> 00:41:11,200
for our partners, we're talking about very durable long-term capital
788
00:41:10,700 --> 00:41:12,400
it can be patient.
789
00:41:13,300 --> 00:41:17,400
And it can be invested over years and there is
790
00:41:17,200 --> 00:41:21,000
where the opportunity set to us looks quite advantageous, but
791
00:41:20,500 --> 00:41:21,800
we wouldn't rush.
792
00:41:22,600 --> 00:41:26,700
But I think for shorter-term government money market funds and then where
793
00:41:26,400 --> 00:41:29,600
that money is moving. I think Mike's 100% right in terms
794
00:41:29,500 --> 00:41:31,200
of ways describing the opportunity set.
795
00:41:32,300 --> 00:41:35,400
So it sounds like you all kind of think that the inflation is sticky.
796
00:41:36,500 --> 00:41:40,200
Thing and I guess I don't know. My only pushback would be you know
797
00:41:40,200 --> 00:41:43,900
inflation expectations have come down and if you
798
00:41:43,900 --> 00:41:47,300
all think the economy is going into recession, which will
799
00:41:47,000 --> 00:41:49,900
eventually move joblessness higher.
800
00:41:50,900 --> 00:41:53,000
Ultimately won't that cure the inflation problem?
801
00:41:53,900 --> 00:41:54,300
Mike
802
00:41:55,000 --> 00:41:55,600
I want to take that.
803
00:41:56,200 --> 00:41:57,100
sure, I mean I
804
00:41:57,700 --> 00:42:01,000
I'm leaning towards where you are in that and that if
805
00:42:00,900 --> 00:42:04,600
you do look at the tips Break, Even Market is suggesting inflation is
806
00:42:04,300 --> 00:42:07,800
going to get down towards two and a half percent over five year period
807
00:42:07,400 --> 00:42:09,200
something like that on average.
808
00:42:10,000 --> 00:42:13,100
It's probably right. So I I think when folks are
809
00:42:13,000 --> 00:42:15,300
talking about inflation being sticky.
810
00:42:16,100 --> 00:42:20,000
We're looking at four to five percent core pce that
811
00:42:19,200 --> 00:42:22,300
goes down to three to four and then two to three
812
00:42:22,200 --> 00:42:25,700
but it takes time. So I think it's it's more about the time
813
00:42:25,300 --> 00:42:28,700
frame. I think that time frame goes over a couple years
814
00:42:28,400 --> 00:42:30,000
not a couple quarters.
815
00:42:30,700 --> 00:42:34,100
And then you know Sarah your question on when
816
00:42:33,700 --> 00:42:37,100
does the FED hike to cut? Yeah cut
817
00:42:36,800 --> 00:42:40,100
when the fat Cuts I you know the way I would think of that is
818
00:42:39,900 --> 00:42:43,100
the markets pricing in 50 basis points over
819
00:42:42,900 --> 00:42:45,600
the rest of this year. That's really hard to imagine.
820
00:42:46,600 --> 00:42:49,700
So I you know, I think we think they'll be on
821
00:42:49,600 --> 00:42:53,500
pause for a while and you'll be discussing a cut in 2024.
822
00:42:52,700 --> 00:42:56,400
But for the rest of this year hike and
823
00:42:56,000 --> 00:42:59,700
then either another hike or in a pause probably feels
824
00:42:59,200 --> 00:43:03,000
better for the next seven eight months then immediately beginning to
825
00:43:02,500 --> 00:43:03,300
cut.
826
00:43:04,600 --> 00:43:07,900
I'm curious, you know when we talked we did a little prep call where we
827
00:43:07,800 --> 00:43:11,000
all spoke about the panel and and wanted to
828
00:43:10,800 --> 00:43:14,000
get some questions to you guys about your business about the
829
00:43:13,900 --> 00:43:17,000
asset management business. And I don't remember
830
00:43:16,900 --> 00:43:20,100
I think Mike you said every business has been affected
831
00:43:19,900 --> 00:43:23,800
by five percent rates. So I'm curious how that's
832
00:43:23,500 --> 00:43:26,700
affected your business and we're the
833
00:43:26,500 --> 00:43:27,100
growth comes from
834
00:43:28,100 --> 00:43:32,500
Yeah, it's interesting the the gross coming from I'd say
835
00:43:32,500 --> 00:43:36,000
in an improvement in choice for the end client meaning
836
00:43:35,700 --> 00:43:40,000
in vehicle proliferation and adoption. So
837
00:43:39,200 --> 00:43:42,400
in a world, especially in
838
00:43:42,300 --> 00:43:45,700
the wealth management side that it focused on mutual funds and moving
839
00:43:45,300 --> 00:43:49,000
into separately manage accounts or sma's Collective Investment
840
00:43:48,600 --> 00:43:52,000
Trust or citiz ETFs,
841
00:43:51,700 --> 00:43:55,600
which we launched a range of fully transparent active
842
00:43:54,800 --> 00:43:58,000
ETFs. It's choice for the
843
00:43:57,800 --> 00:44:01,200
end client is really been where
844
00:44:00,800 --> 00:44:04,200
we've seen the most change and I think that's going
845
00:44:03,900 --> 00:44:07,900
to continue. I think you'll I think you'll see Choice it helps
846
00:44:07,700 --> 00:44:11,200
for tax purposes different reasons why someone
847
00:44:10,800 --> 00:44:14,300
might opt for a different vehicle for us.
848
00:44:14,200 --> 00:44:17,800
It's all about making sure you have the right Investment services available
849
00:44:17,200 --> 00:44:20,800
for the client and then let the client determine how
850
00:44:20,600 --> 00:44:23,800
they like to consume them. But that amount of change, you know,
851
00:44:23,800 --> 00:44:26,900
it's change in terms of the distribution model in terms of how
852
00:44:26,800 --> 00:44:27,800
you're interacting with.
853
00:44:28,000 --> 00:44:31,400
Your clients operating capacity and
854
00:44:31,200 --> 00:44:34,200
expense. There's a lot that goes on with all of that change.
855
00:44:35,900 --> 00:44:38,500
Ethan what about you how has it changed?
856
00:44:39,900 --> 00:44:44,500
Guys are prioritizing, you know what I mean to my comment
857
00:44:43,600 --> 00:44:47,200
about moves into fixed income, you
858
00:44:46,600 --> 00:44:50,500
know at ssga. We're very large index manager
859
00:44:49,700 --> 00:44:52,800
our spider ETFs. So
860
00:44:52,700 --> 00:44:55,900
in many ways, we think of ourselves as sort of creating the building
861
00:44:55,700 --> 00:44:57,800
blocks for many portfolios.
862
00:44:58,700 --> 00:45:02,100
And so I think in many ways we're seeing enormous moves into
863
00:45:02,000 --> 00:45:06,100
fixed income whether that's on the fixed income indexing side or fixing
864
00:45:05,500 --> 00:45:09,200
a ETFs. Frankly. We've had I think three incredible
865
00:45:08,500 --> 00:45:11,800
years already and it feels like we're the
866
00:45:11,600 --> 00:45:15,300
beginning stages of what happened with equities moving much
867
00:45:15,000 --> 00:45:16,500
more into passive.
868
00:45:17,100 --> 00:45:20,700
We also see interest in active ETFs
869
00:45:20,600 --> 00:45:24,000
in the similar fashion. We launched a whole bunch in
870
00:45:23,600 --> 00:45:26,800
partnership with other Asset Management firms on the fixed income
871
00:45:26,600 --> 00:45:27,000
side.
872
00:45:28,000 --> 00:45:32,000
And we think again there's room for sort of a core that's more
873
00:45:31,800 --> 00:45:35,000
passively oriented really thinking about asset allocation in
874
00:45:34,800 --> 00:45:39,000
the first instance and then layering in you
875
00:45:38,500 --> 00:45:41,900
know, those areas where potentially could bring Alpha.
876
00:45:42,600 --> 00:45:46,000
And then I think you know just going back to the conversation. We were
877
00:45:45,800 --> 00:45:49,200
having about private Equity private credit. I do
878
00:45:49,000 --> 00:45:52,700
think you know, our business is a long-term business. And so
879
00:45:52,600 --> 00:45:56,400
part of our role is to really help deliver outcomes
880
00:45:55,600 --> 00:45:58,400
for investors regardless of the environment. We're in
881
00:45:59,100 --> 00:46:02,700
And you know we've seen just a number of public companies come
882
00:46:02,200 --> 00:46:05,900
down dramatically over the decades. Similarly IPOs are
883
00:46:05,500 --> 00:46:09,800
such smaller volume today. There's so much value creation is
884
00:46:09,000 --> 00:46:12,100
happening in the private markets. And I think that's what's
885
00:46:12,000 --> 00:46:15,400
going to continue to drive ultimately demand and
886
00:46:15,300 --> 00:46:18,900
private equity and private credit and ways
887
00:46:18,400 --> 00:46:21,700
that we've already seen so I think it's really thinking about
888
00:46:21,500 --> 00:46:24,900
sort of the near term and being in a
889
00:46:24,800 --> 00:46:28,700
position in our case as a provider of investment exposures.
890
00:46:28,200 --> 00:46:31,400
What additional exposures should we be bringing out into the
891
00:46:31,200 --> 00:46:34,900
market bringing those insides together help investors
892
00:46:34,300 --> 00:46:38,200
create portfolias at a robust enough preserve Capital
893
00:46:37,800 --> 00:46:39,900
take advantage of opportunities.
894
00:46:40,800 --> 00:46:44,800
And then really thinking about the longer term structural Trends and
895
00:46:44,100 --> 00:46:47,900
I do agree also that the wealth segment
896
00:46:47,700 --> 00:46:51,900
is a fascinating place that I think will continue to
897
00:46:50,900 --> 00:46:54,500
grow. We're seeing the benefit of Technology bringing
898
00:46:53,900 --> 00:46:57,500
what used to be only available to the largest institutions. We're
899
00:46:57,100 --> 00:47:00,400
just separate accounts, right? I mean hundred thousand dollars
900
00:47:00,300 --> 00:47:03,600
even potentially less ambassadors can get that same
901
00:47:03,300 --> 00:47:06,600
sort of, you know management of
902
00:47:06,500 --> 00:47:09,600
their assets. We're seeing model portfolias. It used
903
00:47:09,500 --> 00:47:12,900
to be the purview again of Institutions. That is one of the fastest growing
904
00:47:12,600 --> 00:47:16,100
Arenas in the retail Marketplace and then
905
00:47:15,900 --> 00:47:18,900
you think about even direct indexing right? I mean,
906
00:47:18,900 --> 00:47:23,100
we're in the business today and providing really customized index mandates
907
00:47:21,900 --> 00:47:25,200
for very sophisticated institutions that
908
00:47:24,900 --> 00:47:28,800
again is coming into you know,
909
00:47:28,800 --> 00:47:32,700
individuals hands and said this longer term trend of democratizing
910
00:47:31,900 --> 00:47:35,400
investing and making available what's been
911
00:47:35,100 --> 00:47:38,600
available to institutions to individual investors. I
912
00:47:38,200 --> 00:47:40,600
think is another area that we're very
913
00:47:40,800 --> 00:47:42,000
bullish on
914
00:47:43,400 --> 00:47:46,700
Katie what are you how do you focus strategically on this
915
00:47:46,600 --> 00:47:50,100
kind of environment? Yeah, I just say from business perspective two
916
00:47:49,600 --> 00:47:53,800
things. I that a lot of that resonates that the value
917
00:47:53,500 --> 00:47:56,800
proposition for clients needs to go up in this industry. And actually
918
00:47:56,700 --> 00:48:00,100
if you look at any industry over time you need
919
00:48:00,000 --> 00:48:04,200
to and more and more people come in and it becomes more and more competitive and
920
00:48:03,400 --> 00:48:06,900
the Returns come harder to come by actually the
921
00:48:06,500 --> 00:48:10,100
value proposition shifts towards clients and
922
00:48:10,000 --> 00:48:13,800
delivering that and the Best in Class way which means liquid transparent
923
00:48:13,000 --> 00:48:16,300
and cheaper broadly across all asset classes.
924
00:48:16,100 --> 00:48:19,700
So I would agree with that and I think if you're
925
00:48:19,600 --> 00:48:22,700
an LP or an individual client the next 10 years
926
00:48:22,600 --> 00:48:25,900
should be better for you. You should have an experience
927
00:48:25,600 --> 00:48:29,200
with lower fees and less friction and it
928
00:48:28,900 --> 00:48:32,100
should be less fun probably for all of us, which is
929
00:48:31,900 --> 00:48:35,300
part of the hard job that we have here over the next 10 years
930
00:48:35,100 --> 00:48:38,400
and we'll just have to to meet together on that
931
00:48:38,200 --> 00:48:41,400
from a partnership perspective. And then I just wanted to make the
932
00:48:41,300 --> 00:48:43,100
observation. I absolutely agree that
933
00:48:44,000 --> 00:48:47,500
Um, when you're trying to invest anywhere on the capitol structure,
934
00:48:47,200 --> 00:48:51,100
what we're really trying to do is own a piece of GDP broadly
935
00:48:50,600 --> 00:48:55,400
that will translate into returns over time and you
936
00:48:54,200 --> 00:48:57,800
know, the productive capacity of this country's
937
00:48:57,200 --> 00:49:00,900
moving a lot from public to private markets and I I
938
00:49:00,600 --> 00:49:03,900
lived through that disruption in the public Equity markets. We now have
939
00:49:03,800 --> 00:49:07,900
50% less publicly listed companies than we did, you know,
940
00:49:07,900 --> 00:49:11,900
20 years ago and and that I'm
941
00:49:11,200 --> 00:49:15,100
not I'm not against private Equity at all, but it
942
00:49:14,900 --> 00:49:18,200
is also true that most individual investors didn't
943
00:49:17,900 --> 00:49:21,500
get a lot of access to that wealth creation opportunity and now
944
00:49:21,200 --> 00:49:24,500
we're in a very similar place in credit markets. We're 30% of
945
00:49:24,300 --> 00:49:27,500
credit is in private markets. And so I do think we're going
946
00:49:27,400 --> 00:49:30,700
to have to think about as a community how we get
947
00:49:30,500 --> 00:49:34,200
some of those assets in a safe and reliable
948
00:49:33,600 --> 00:49:37,000
way on to the individual
949
00:49:36,700 --> 00:49:39,900
investor and I don't think any of us have actually come up
950
00:49:39,800 --> 00:49:43,300
with a great answer for that. Obviously. There's some Vehicles out there we
951
00:49:42,900 --> 00:49:43,400
all
952
00:49:43,500 --> 00:49:47,200
What they are but I would think that even The Regulators would
953
00:49:46,900 --> 00:49:52,000
be focused on figuring out how we do that because generally their
954
00:49:50,800 --> 00:49:54,200
view would that wealth creation should be should be
955
00:49:54,000 --> 00:49:57,200
broadly distributed. And so I don't I don't have the magic answer
956
00:49:57,000 --> 00:50:00,600
for everyone on that. But that's something we're thinking really hard about how
957
00:50:00,100 --> 00:50:03,400
we bridge that that gap between
958
00:50:03,100 --> 00:50:07,000
public and private markets particularly for individual investors. And
959
00:50:06,400 --> 00:50:10,000
I think whoever figures out how to do that and to
960
00:50:09,700 --> 00:50:13,300
deliver it in a really frictionless way. That's a that's
961
00:50:12,800 --> 00:50:14,100
a massive Tam.
962
00:50:14,800 --> 00:50:18,200
Well first they have to figure out how to regulate Shadow lending and
963
00:50:18,100 --> 00:50:22,100
then they can figure out how to regulate democratizing shadow shadow lending.
964
00:50:21,800 --> 00:50:26,000
I guess I got to spend more time with the regional Banks first. Yeah, just
965
00:50:24,800 --> 00:50:28,400
a prioritization. Yeah, exactly. So
966
00:50:27,800 --> 00:50:31,400
I call let me ask you is there a growth problem in
967
00:50:30,800 --> 00:50:31,900
your industry?
968
00:50:32,600 --> 00:50:35,800
You just had a tricky quarter. Yeah. Well, so one.
969
00:50:37,100 --> 00:50:40,900
I'll tell you they're very few satisfying Industries and
970
00:50:40,600 --> 00:50:44,000
asset management still is one of those and I'll tell you why it's satisfying.
971
00:50:45,200 --> 00:50:48,700
It is still an industry where it easily covers
972
00:50:48,400 --> 00:50:51,800
its cost of capital. And what's our Capital costs, it's
973
00:50:51,700 --> 00:50:54,800
Talent. That's essentially what asset Management's cost of
974
00:50:54,700 --> 00:50:57,800
capital is and yes, there is technology cost now and things like
975
00:50:57,700 --> 00:51:00,800
that, but it easily covers it. So it's a good industry to be in
976
00:51:00,700 --> 00:51:03,100
because you across the board.
977
00:51:03,900 --> 00:51:06,700
It is tougher now and I'll tell you why it's tougher.
978
00:51:07,300 --> 00:51:11,000
what used to be easy in asset management and 5%
979
00:51:10,500 --> 00:51:14,000
environment sort of accelerates this movement
980
00:51:13,600 --> 00:51:14,300
is
981
00:51:15,200 --> 00:51:19,300
What you had to do have great products great
982
00:51:18,600 --> 00:51:22,200
client service decent performance
983
00:51:21,600 --> 00:51:23,500
and the money came in.
984
00:51:24,600 --> 00:51:28,100
Those are not the only sufficient conditions to
985
00:51:27,900 --> 00:51:31,100
grow in Asset Management anymore. I think the
986
00:51:30,900 --> 00:51:34,700
biggest change for us is the business
987
00:51:34,400 --> 00:51:37,700
has become more complicated because the clients have become
988
00:51:37,400 --> 00:51:40,900
more sophisticated, you know there would you were
989
00:51:40,400 --> 00:51:43,400
joking about the wealth management space I could tell you
990
00:51:43,400 --> 00:51:46,600
even wealth management clients are way more sophisticated. They want
991
00:51:46,400 --> 00:51:49,700
more for their dollar and the way they want more for their dollar
992
00:51:49,400 --> 00:51:53,700
is they want some sort of complex
993
00:51:52,400 --> 00:51:55,700
advice embedded in products now,
994
00:51:55,400 --> 00:51:59,200
they just don't simply buy a product. I'll give
995
00:51:59,200 --> 00:52:02,400
you two examples where we we do a lot of work and
996
00:52:02,300 --> 00:52:05,700
I see this is we are big investors in real estate,
997
00:52:05,600 --> 00:52:08,800
you know, we have over 100 billion in all sorts of
998
00:52:08,800 --> 00:52:12,000
real estate and it used to be that you would have clients who
999
00:52:11,800 --> 00:52:15,200
would just invest with you in real estate
1000
00:52:15,100 --> 00:52:18,400
private equity and those clients, you know, they've gone through
1001
00:52:18,200 --> 00:52:21,600
this cycle over time. And now what they say is well, that's
1002
00:52:21,400 --> 00:52:24,300
not good enough. We want someone who can think
1003
00:52:24,500 --> 00:52:27,800
About the Arbitrage between REITs and real estate. We want
1004
00:52:27,600 --> 00:52:30,800
somebody who can think between the Arbitrage between
1005
00:52:30,600 --> 00:52:34,300
mortgages and cmbs. So the complexity of
1006
00:52:34,100 --> 00:52:38,000
what people expect from you is higher they
1007
00:52:37,100 --> 00:52:41,200
still pay you that so I think the successful firms
1008
00:52:40,500 --> 00:52:44,400
in Asset Management have to process that complexity. It's
1009
00:52:44,000 --> 00:52:47,500
a multi-dimensional expectation now than a one-dimensional
1010
00:52:47,000 --> 00:52:50,500
expectation. You see that even in traditional
1011
00:52:50,100 --> 00:52:53,100
fixed income, you know, it used to be we were talking a lot
1012
00:52:53,100 --> 00:52:56,300
about rates and it's easy to manage rates, you know, what's
1013
00:52:56,100 --> 00:52:59,600
more difficult managing effects and we've had
1014
00:52:59,300 --> 00:53:02,600
an enormous run in the US dollar the US dollar is
1015
00:53:02,300 --> 00:53:05,600
going to other way and every fixed income investor says,
1016
00:53:05,500 --> 00:53:08,700
well, you may be great at managing duration, but do you have FX skills?
1017
00:53:08,500 --> 00:53:12,400
So I think the business of asset management is getting
1018
00:53:12,000 --> 00:53:15,200
tougher but it's still industry that
1019
00:53:15,000 --> 00:53:18,800
will easily cover its cost of capital and will reward
1020
00:53:18,300 --> 00:53:21,600
the clients and the industry itself. This is supposed to
1021
00:53:21,500 --> 00:53:23,900
be the portion. However, where you guys talk about how
1022
00:53:24,500 --> 00:53:27,900
Is transforming your industry and making everything more
1023
00:53:27,600 --> 00:53:31,400
efficient and exciting is their role here for AI
1024
00:53:31,100 --> 00:53:32,000
and investing.
1025
00:53:32,500 --> 00:53:36,000
You ask me that I couldn't hear when you first did you say me Harvey? Sure.
1026
00:53:35,700 --> 00:53:39,500
I didn't hear you. Got a general question for them. It's General.
1027
00:53:39,300 --> 00:53:42,500
But yeah, well, I'm happy to take a crack out of
1028
00:53:42,300 --> 00:53:43,200
their mind the
1029
00:53:45,100 --> 00:53:48,500
I do think the trends in the industry are hugely positive whether
1030
00:53:48,200 --> 00:53:51,500
it's democratization product development had a
1031
00:53:51,300 --> 00:53:53,400
conversation with someone very smart earlier and they said
1032
00:53:54,700 --> 00:53:58,200
Why do you even refer to it as alternative at this state? It's just really investing
1033
00:53:57,700 --> 00:54:01,400
and it's about I think Mike said very
1034
00:54:00,700 --> 00:54:04,400
well. It's really just about making sure that we're providing
1035
00:54:03,700 --> 00:54:06,900
our partners our clients with the
1036
00:54:06,800 --> 00:54:09,900
right opportunities and the right returns for what they want to
1037
00:54:09,800 --> 00:54:11,100
achieve over a long period of time.
1038
00:54:11,900 --> 00:54:15,100
I do think one of the more fascinating things that will happen in
1039
00:54:14,900 --> 00:54:18,700
the industry over. The next decade is the introduction of AI
1040
00:54:18,100 --> 00:54:22,000
and data science and machine learning and once
1041
00:54:21,100 --> 00:54:24,400
been a lot of time on this, but we had a demonstration.
1042
00:54:25,400 --> 00:54:28,700
Internally just last week and it was
1043
00:54:28,500 --> 00:54:31,800
sort of mind-blowing for everybody to see
1044
00:54:31,500 --> 00:54:35,700
just the developments in chat GPT just
1045
00:54:35,100 --> 00:54:38,800
recently and how in one of our portfolio companies
1046
00:54:38,300 --> 00:54:41,800
by spending a very small amount of money. They
1047
00:54:41,300 --> 00:54:45,000
were able to actually completely redefine the
1048
00:54:45,000 --> 00:54:46,100
efficiency of processes.
1049
00:54:47,200 --> 00:54:49,200
And this isn't even really the first inning.
1050
00:54:49,700 --> 00:54:52,900
and so I do think the trending technology which has gone
1051
00:54:52,800 --> 00:54:56,100
on for 40 years is going to be a very steep Trend and
1052
00:54:56,000 --> 00:54:57,800
I think it will only enable us to
1053
00:54:59,800 --> 00:55:03,200
be better managers of capital understand our clients needs
1054
00:55:02,900 --> 00:55:05,500
and deliver to our clients any better, but this this will be
1055
00:55:07,000 --> 00:55:10,300
Definitely evolutionary in my mind may be revolutionary but it's
1056
00:55:10,200 --> 00:55:13,800
going to be we're early. We're early stage in this new part of the process which
1057
00:55:13,500 --> 00:55:17,300
will go on I think for at least another 10 to 15 years anybody else experimenting
1058
00:55:16,500 --> 00:55:19,900
with Chachi speed GPT or
1059
00:55:19,800 --> 00:55:21,200
AI in the business?
1060
00:55:23,200 --> 00:55:27,200
Or too early I'd say from an investment perspective. It's
1061
00:55:26,400 --> 00:55:29,600
really about structuring unstructured data.
1062
00:55:29,500 --> 00:55:34,100
So for us you have so much data and try
1063
00:55:33,000 --> 00:55:36,500
trying to harness that and use
1064
00:55:36,300 --> 00:55:40,000
it as a component of your process can be value-added and
1065
00:55:39,500 --> 00:55:44,100
there's a lot of there's a lot of examples in that it's
1066
00:55:42,700 --> 00:55:46,200
not meant to answer the question. It's
1067
00:55:45,800 --> 00:55:49,500
meant to be a piece of the pie and and we're using
1068
00:55:48,800 --> 00:55:52,200
it in that way and I I think that's
1069
00:55:52,000 --> 00:55:56,100
a one-way train. It's also from operating our
1070
00:55:55,800 --> 00:55:59,200
business and not just investing. It's making us
1071
00:55:58,900 --> 00:56:02,500
more efficient and helping us scale our business. So that's really
1072
00:56:02,300 --> 00:56:03,600
important the effectively
1073
00:56:04,700 --> 00:56:07,800
Can become more efficient you can operate smartly which is one of
1074
00:56:07,800 --> 00:56:11,300
our core themes and and at the same time on the
1075
00:56:11,100 --> 00:56:14,700
investment side, you basically have a 24/7 research assistant.
1076
00:56:15,400 --> 00:56:18,900
And that's super helpful when when you're looking at capacity to
1077
00:56:18,800 --> 00:56:19,800
help you make decisions.
1078
00:56:20,500 --> 00:56:24,000
Related question from the audience on this. Well, it's not on this but
1079
00:56:23,600 --> 00:56:27,100
I'm going to make it on this which is we have seen significant
1080
00:56:26,600 --> 00:56:30,800
layoffs in Tech. Is that coming to Asset Management?
1081
00:56:30,700 --> 00:56:31,500
Whether it's
1082
00:56:32,600 --> 00:56:34,500
the environment or I guess
1083
00:56:35,700 --> 00:56:37,200
having a digital research assistant
1084
00:56:37,900 --> 00:56:41,100
I'll start with that and answer the
1085
00:56:40,900 --> 00:56:44,100
previous question too Tech was just the locus of some of
1086
00:56:44,100 --> 00:56:48,100
the most excess in the market particularly during
1087
00:56:47,700 --> 00:56:50,700
the pandemic period And I think it goes back to the
1088
00:56:50,700 --> 00:56:54,200
same concept A Lot build up and there's a lot to wash out the
1089
00:56:53,800 --> 00:56:56,900
asset management industry written largely did not
1090
00:56:56,800 --> 00:57:00,700
have as much so we wouldn't I generally wouldn't
1091
00:57:00,500 --> 00:57:04,200
expect to see this the same level of cuts but it
1092
00:57:04,100 --> 00:57:07,400
is it is quite significant the job destruction that's happening
1093
00:57:07,100 --> 00:57:10,300
in technology. And I and I'm hopeful that
1094
00:57:10,200 --> 00:57:13,400
will all of us will be able to pick up some of that engineering talent because
1095
00:57:13,200 --> 00:57:16,600
we're all going to need it over the next decade and then
1096
00:57:16,500 --> 00:57:20,000
I just want to make a quick comment on on AI. We are
1097
00:57:19,900 --> 00:57:23,500
looking at it in the same ways. The other panelists are I think
1098
00:57:23,400 --> 00:57:26,600
it's incredibly important our view
1099
00:57:26,400 --> 00:57:30,400
alluded to this. This is a real thing and it's
1100
00:57:29,900 --> 00:57:33,300
probably going to be the defining technology of the
1101
00:57:33,100 --> 00:57:36,700
next 10 years and it is very important and
1102
00:57:36,300 --> 00:57:37,500
we're spending a lot of time.
1103
00:57:37,900 --> 00:57:41,300
To understand this particularly in the equity markets Company by
1104
00:57:41,100 --> 00:57:44,300
company about who understands how to harness this and
1105
00:57:44,100 --> 00:57:47,500
where the winners and losers are so you really want
1106
00:57:47,100 --> 00:57:50,600
to think about this in the magnitude of things going from off to
1107
00:57:50,400 --> 00:57:54,000
online and then eventually to mobile and how how
1108
00:57:53,400 --> 00:57:56,600
much that disrupted the consumer Market it changed
1109
00:57:56,400 --> 00:58:00,700
the entire consumer market and it's just a totally different Market the companies
1110
00:58:00,300 --> 00:58:03,500
that didn't figure out how to do that when bankrupt the ones that figured
1111
00:58:03,300 --> 00:58:06,600
out how to do it have a trillion dollar market cap. And that is
1112
00:58:06,400 --> 00:58:09,600
what is going to happen here with the use of AI
1113
00:58:09,400 --> 00:58:12,900
and I know Carla I'm sure we're spending a lot of time asking their
1114
00:58:12,700 --> 00:58:15,700
companies how they plan to use it. So we'll come up
1115
00:58:15,700 --> 00:58:18,900
with a good answer for that for you not on the stage but in the
1116
00:58:18,800 --> 00:58:22,200
future and I think it's true of all public Equity companies. That's
1117
00:58:21,900 --> 00:58:24,900
the number one. It's not it's not just our sector. It's not
1118
00:58:24,900 --> 00:58:28,500
just in technology. It's a cross all sectors. How are you going to use that to
1119
00:58:28,000 --> 00:58:31,200
redefine your business model and to win
1120
00:58:31,100 --> 00:58:34,400
in your category and I think healthcare could be by far
1121
00:58:34,200 --> 00:58:37,500
the biggest beneficiary of that Healthcare is currently
1122
00:58:37,800 --> 00:58:41,400
25% of the GDP in this country for the worst Healthcare outcomes
1123
00:58:40,800 --> 00:58:44,200
in the oecd and if we could get that
1124
00:58:44,000 --> 00:58:47,800
data and use it and harness it appropriately there could
1125
00:58:47,700 --> 00:58:51,400
be a lot of value creation last comment is just that by definition.
1126
00:58:51,200 --> 00:58:54,500
This is actually massively deflationary. So if
1127
00:58:54,300 --> 00:58:58,700
you want to think about inflation from a secular perspective, like,
1128
00:58:57,600 --> 00:59:00,900
you know, it's hard to call it on a 12
1129
00:59:00,700 --> 00:59:04,400
to 24 month view but technology continues to
1130
00:59:04,400 --> 00:59:07,800
be massively deflationary. All right, 45 seconds left. We'll do
1131
00:59:07,800 --> 00:59:11,300
a speed round for everyone in the next year
1132
00:59:10,800 --> 00:59:14,100
when we all meet again at Milken on the stage,
1133
00:59:13,900 --> 00:59:14,400
hopefully.
1134
00:59:15,400 --> 00:59:18,600
The best investment will be have been in the
1135
00:59:18,500 --> 00:59:20,300
past year. What?
1136
00:59:21,100 --> 00:59:21,600
Come on.
1137
00:59:23,900 --> 00:59:25,900
the longest duration Bonds in the world
1138
00:59:27,900 --> 00:59:31,800
The longest duration bonds and in the world in the world finally the
1139
00:59:31,200 --> 00:59:32,900
longest duration board by it.
1140
00:59:34,100 --> 00:59:37,300
Mike I'll go a little shorter duration because that seems
1141
00:59:37,100 --> 00:59:41,200
like a hundred year bond is long. But yeah, I
1142
00:59:40,300 --> 00:59:43,900
would I would say intermediate duration
1143
00:59:43,500 --> 00:59:46,800
high quality fix incomes would return something like
1144
00:59:46,600 --> 00:59:50,400
six or seven percent. The lawyers aren't here. So I I could return
1145
00:59:50,100 --> 00:59:53,900
something like six or something and I think in the backdrop of
1146
00:59:53,600 --> 00:59:56,000
what we're all talking about. That's probably a good investment.
1147
00:59:56,500 --> 00:59:59,700
You said yeah, I be sort of been fixed income too.
1148
00:59:59,500 --> 01:00:03,600
Probably more and treasuries thinking that
1149
01:00:03,400 --> 01:00:06,900
obviously fixed income yields are very attractive and then
1150
01:00:06,700 --> 01:00:11,000
depending on the scenario if we think that there's more of a tougher Landing
1151
01:00:10,800 --> 01:00:12,700
than it'll be a good place to be.
1152
01:00:13,900 --> 01:00:17,200
Katie it's good thing you went in to run a fixed income business. I know
1153
01:00:17,000 --> 01:00:20,200
I mean, I'm just thinking sitting here thinking how fortuitous that is.
1154
01:00:20,100 --> 01:00:20,900
I would say.
1155
01:00:22,400 --> 01:00:26,100
Cash and appropriately structured highly conservatively
1156
01:00:25,500 --> 01:00:27,100
structured private credit.
1157
01:00:28,800 --> 01:00:32,300
So I think waiting is key and then
1158
01:00:32,200 --> 01:00:35,400
I think when opportunities present themselves into structured credit
1159
01:00:35,300 --> 01:00:38,600
where you're getting the right risk adjusted return in particularly in
1160
01:00:38,400 --> 01:00:41,100
acute environment. I think you get massive outperformance.
1161
01:00:41,700 --> 01:00:45,200
But I think I think waiting is key. You guys stuck here time queues.
1162
01:00:44,700 --> 01:00:49,100
Very good. Thank you very much. Thank you. Thank you for being
1163
01:00:49,100 --> 01:00:50,000
here. Thank you, everyone.
1164
01:00:52,600 --> 01:00:55,900
Is that beautiful house? You may ask yourself?
1165
01:00:55,600 --> 01:00:59,100
Where does that Highway go to and you
1166
01:00:58,900 --> 01:00:59,300
may
Today’s complex market environment has been challenging for asset management. However, at this year’s Milken Institute Global Conference, State Street Global Advisors President and CEO Yie-Hsin Hung said opportunities may come along soon.
The stubborn inflation and high interest rates of the past couple of years have been challenging for asset managers. But as the industry adapts to this new inflationary, fast-moving environment, State Street Global Advisors President and CEO Yie-Hsin Hung says asset managers must remain vigilant, nimble and “ready to pivot.” “This is one of the most difficult environments to predict or forecast in terms of what the future looks like,” she observed, speaking at the Milken Institute 2023 Global Conference in Los Angeles. “We have to be ready to pivot when opportunities present themselves.”
Hung participated on the panel, “Asset Management in Incalculable Times” as part of Milken’s Global Conference, which this year was themed “Advancing in a Thriving World.” She was joined by Kamal Bhatia, Global Head of Investments at Principal Asset Management; Mike Gitlin, Incoming President and CEO of Capital Group; Katie Koch, CEO at TCW; and Harvey Schwartz, Carlyle CEO.
In its 26th year, the Milken Global Conference featured more than 3,500 C-suites and influencers, including asset managers, asset owners and alternative asset managers. Below are key themes discussed in the panel.
Current market environment
The current volatility emanating from the banking sector is different from the 2008 financial crisis. The system has shown that it can handle and digest current market issues, due to the interconnectivity of the market and the regulatory tools now in place as a result of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC). Global Systemically Important Banks (GSIBs), like State Street, are in a stronger position now than in 2008, and have shown greater resilience than regional banks. Even though regional banks remain critically important to the economy, particularly for small business and areas such as commercial real estate, investors should remain cautious. Investing in regional banks is not a bet on the economy or the resiliency in the market, as their business model is dependent on the Fed to cut rates.
Investor behavior
It is a difficult environment to predict at this point, and we are paying attention to how investors are positioned. State Street recently launched three new indicators that enable us to further analyze institutional investor behavior and tolerance for risk. We’ve seen individual investors retreat from risk assets since March. Today, there is an enormous amount of cash sitting on the sidelines, and we still think it’s too early to see individuals reentering the equity markets.
Where is the market going?
Currently, there is a tremendous degree of complexity between inflation and economic stability, prompting uncertainty about market direction to remain high. The panel expects that there will be one more rate hike this year, and that the 2024 economy will grow modestly based on future rate cuts. Consumer spending is in decent shape and real wages are up. The higher volatility environment should still provide opportunities for equity investors, but it will also likely feature deeper drawdowns and shallower recoveries.