BlackRock Inc.’s Rick Rieder has some advice that bucks conventional wisdom: The best way for the Federal Reserve to temper inflation will be to lower rates, not hold them higher.
BlackRock Inc.’s Rick Rieder has some advice that bucks conventional wisdom: The best way for the Federal Reserve to temper inflation will be to lower rates, not hold them higher.
That’s because well-heeled Americans are earning more than they have in years from fixed-income investments, given that benchmark rates remain on hold at their highest level in a generation, according to Rieder, BlackRock’s chief investment officer of global fixed income.
“I’m not certain that raising interest rates actually brings down inflation,” Rieder told Bloomberg’s David Westin for an upcoming episode of Wall Street Week airing Friday. “In fact, I would lay out an argument that actually if you cut interest rates, you bring down inflation.”
Middle- to higher-income Americans “are getting a big benefit from these interest rates,” he said. “We’re moving to a service-oriented economy, more money is being spent on services, but actually what’s happening — because goods prices have come down so much — it’s allowing for disposable income to go into services.”
Rieder pointed to sticky inflation across service sectors, like auto and health insurance, as evidence. “They’re unresponsive to interest rates and people are spending — older people, middle- to high-income are spending — and are keeping that service-level inflation at high levels.”
“The price of a pair of tennis shoes is what it was 20 years ago. If you go to a tennis match, it’s double what it used to be,” he added.
Bond markets rallied Wednesday after a report showed that headline growth in consumer prices eased in April, with swaps traders ramping up bets that the Fed will ease by as many as two quarter-point cuts come December. But inflation data has also showed that for some areas of the service economy — from shelter costs to auto insurance and medical care — price growth is proving harder to tame.
Still, “the worst fears were allayed” with the release of the April CPI data, Rieder said. “As long as you’re price stable, employing a lot of people, growing the size of the workforce, and moderating a little bit on the growth side, it’s pretty good.” With assistance from David Westin.