Fed 'normalization' will ‘take a lot longer than everybody thinks’: Strategist

In This Article:

BMO Capital Markets Chief Investment Strategist Brian Belski joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the outlook for Fed policy and the markets.

Video Transcript

EMILY MCCORMICK: Let's stick with the topic of the markets and the Fed with our next guest. Brian Belski is BMO Capital Markets' chief investment strategist. He joins us now. Brian, thank you so much for being with us. Looking at the market reaction to Fed Chair Jerome Powell's hearing from this morning, we have US stocks turning positive, tech is outperforming, and Treasury yields are retreating, especially on the long end of the curve. What do you think that markets heard that they're responding to from Powell?

BRIAN BELSKI: Well, Emily so great to see you, and thank you so much for having us on Yahoo, first hit of 2022 on your network. So we always loved being on with you. So I think the key thing on his testimony was this whole notion of extrapolating duration. If you're a fixed income investor, duration and convexity matter the most, and it sure sounds to us like he is really positioning for this, quote, unquote, normalization, which is a terrible word by the way and way worn out. It's going to take a lot longer than everybody thinks, and that should not come as a surprise to investors.

You know, one of the things, you know, one of the luxuries of doing this job for a long time, we've written a lot of year ahead reports in terms of our forecast for the year to come. And we tend to get really reflective, so we kind of went back and looked at what we were writing in 1998 but then also 2009, '10, '11 when we were actually quite critical of the Fed, thinking that they should be more aggressive in terms of pulling back QE. And it took a lot longer for them to do that. In fact, they didn't pull back QE until 2014.

So again, I think the biggest comment on most investors mind that we talked to around the world would be a, quote, unquote, policy mistake, Emily, that the Fed might be too aggressive. Mr. Powell basically came out today and said this is going to be a process, as we like to say in Canada, process, with respect to how long this is going to take. And I think that's what's calming investors, especially considering the riot that has been the technology sector leading up to today.

- Brian, when you said process, I could see my grandmother in Montreal, can you get me some Nanaimo bars? I got to ask you, when we look at what Powell-- there was a lot going on there today, and, yeah, we're all focused on inflation. And we're focused on how do you roll off an $8.8 trillion balance sheet. But as an investor at the end of the day, not much is really about to change, at least in the next six months for us. Or is it? And if it is, how do we prepare?