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One Wall Street strategist just made a big call that should have everyone worried

Published 04/23/2017, 08:34 AM
Updated 04/24/2017, 08:45 AM
© Scott Minerd

Scott Minerd, Guggenheim Partners' global chief investment officer and head of Guggenheim Investments, the asset management arm of Guggenheim, just made a big call on the 10-year yield.

In a tweet on Monday morning, Minerd said, "The next stop for 10-Year Treasury yields is 2%, with the probability rising that we revisit 1.5% or lower this summer."

Treasury yields surged in the weeks after the election — the 10-year yield climbed about 80 basis points, to more than 2.60% — on the prospects that President Donald Trump's economic agenda would bring inflation back to the United States. That caused analysts on Wall Street to declare the end of the bull market in bonds.

"If Brexit marked a 5,000-year low in global interest rates, Trump marked the moment investors started to position for a bond bear market," Bank of America (NYSE:BAC)'s Michael Hartnett wrote in a note to clients shortly after the election.

Since then, however, the GOP's healthcare-reform plan has stalled, and that has caused traders to question Trump's ability to deliver on his proposals to cut taxes and roll back regulations.

Yields have fallen sharply over the past month as key data hasn't lived up to the hype. First, the March jobs report disappointed, then retail sales whiffed, and core consumer prices posted their first drop since 2010. All of that has caused the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow forecasting tool to predict gross domestic product will grow by a tepid 0.5% in the first quarter.

The disappointing data is being reflected in the bond market. The 10-year topped out at 2.64% in the middle of March — two days before the Federal Reserve hiked interest rates — and has fallen more than 40 basis points.

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But Minerd's betting it will fall a lot further as the economy proves itself to be weaker than everyone thinks.

His call seems to be the first on Wall Street that suggests the 10-year could approach the record low, near 1.35%, set in July.

Minerd's call follows comments from the retired hedge fund manager Raoul Pal, who at the end of March said that "the speculative positioning in bonds up until about a week and a half ago, two weeks ago, was the largest ever short position in the history of the bond markets."

"Everyone is going to be on the wrong side of the boat at the wrong time," he said.

Investing.com

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