The bond market is pricing in ‘several futures’ amid Fed tightening, strategist says

Research Affiliates CIO Chris Brightman joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss Fed policy and inflation.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: All right, I'll stay on the markets here, Chris Brightman is the CEO and CIO of Research Affiliates and joins us now. Chris, good to see you here. Top of the morning to you. What-- should one of the takeaways from the comments from Fed chief Jerome Powell yesterday be that investors should just expect lower long-term returns because interest rates are headed higher?

CHRIS BRIGHTMAN: I think that's the correct message. And not just lower long-term returns from the bond market but lower long-term returns from the stock market as well. Remember, the stock market's trading at near all-time highs in terms of prices relative to say, cyclically adjusted earnings or extraordinarily low dividend yields.

And that's perhaps justified by extraordinarily low interest rates. But as extraordinary low interest rate environment comes to a close, equity pricing is at risk as well. And certainly the higher-flying more expensive names more so than the cheaper names. The discrepancy between the pricing of growth and value names remains near all-time highs. And as we see inflation rise and particularly real interest rates rise, you can expect the continued outperformance of value stocks, banks, commodity, the oil companies, et cetera, relative to transportation services, and technology.

BRIAN SOZZI: So Chris, how low is low? Over the next two years, rates are going higher, perhaps pretty steadily. Are we talking sub 5% returns for the markets?

CHRIS BRIGHTMAN: Well, there's of course, a lot of uncertainty right now. The bond market's pricing in sort of perfection of a soft landing with no recession. And I think the way to think about that is there's really-- that's a possibility, I think it's a rather unlikely one but there's two other possibilities around that. One is that we're in a recession by 2023, and the other is that we're in stagflation. The recession obviously bodes very poorly for stocks and temporarily maybe not so bad for bonds. Stagflation is just terrible for bonds and generally not a great environment for stocks as well, and one that favors value stocks.

So rather than thinking about the bond market as pricing in one future, I think there's several futures that they're pricing in and one is stagflation. And I'll remind you that during the 1970s, cash returned negative 1% for the full decade, which is not great but both bonds and stocks returned negative 4% real for the full decade compound annually. So that's-- in response to your question, it could very easily-- it just as easily be negative returns as positive returns.