1 00:00:00,520 --> 00:00:03,760 Speaker 1: This is Bloomberg Wall Street Week. We turn our attention 2 00:00:03,880 --> 00:00:07,120 Speaker 1: to the markets this week. U S CPI nevers reinforcing 3 00:00:07,160 --> 00:00:10,639 Speaker 1: concerns about inflation. The financial stories that chief are worth 4 00:00:10,720 --> 00:00:13,760 Speaker 1: a really different reaction to markets. More indications of just 5 00:00:13,960 --> 00:00:16,360 Speaker 1: how hot the U. S. Economy really is. Through the 6 00:00:16,400 --> 00:00:19,799 Speaker 1: eyes of the most influential voices Larry Summers, the former 7 00:00:19,800 --> 00:00:22,800 Speaker 1: Streatory Secretary, Katherine Keening, CEO of v n Y mom 8 00:00:22,960 --> 00:00:26,279 Speaker 1: Sam's l Sharmon and founder of Equatic Group Investment. In 9 00:00:26,320 --> 00:00:30,280 Speaker 1: Bloomberg Wall Street Week with David Weston from Bloomberg Radio, 10 00:00:30,760 --> 00:00:34,840 Speaker 1: China slows, the Fed worries and former President Trump strikes back. 11 00:00:35,360 --> 00:00:39,040 Speaker 1: This is Bloomberg Wall Street Week. I'm David Weston, this 12 00:00:39,080 --> 00:00:42,120 Speaker 1: week's special contributor to Larry Summers of Harvard on where 13 00:00:42,159 --> 00:00:46,360 Speaker 1: the housing market is headed. I do think we're looking 14 00:00:46,560 --> 00:00:52,760 Speaker 1: towards softness in the future with respect to housing. And 15 00:00:52,920 --> 00:00:56,120 Speaker 1: Sonya Gibbs of the Institute of International Finance on the 16 00:00:56,240 --> 00:01:00,920 Speaker 1: risk and the opportunity of zombie companies. Money that's being 17 00:01:00,960 --> 00:01:04,839 Speaker 1: spent to keep zombie companies afloat is money that could 18 00:01:04,880 --> 00:01:21,920 Speaker 1: be more productively deployed elsewhere. It was a week of signals, 19 00:01:22,200 --> 00:01:26,679 Speaker 1: some subtle and some not. China sent an unmistakable signal 20 00:01:26,720 --> 00:01:29,880 Speaker 1: that its economy is slowing, something that a ten basis 21 00:01:29,880 --> 00:01:33,800 Speaker 1: point rate cut doesn't seem likely to fix. President she 22 00:01:34,080 --> 00:01:37,119 Speaker 1: is confronting a number of both, you know, short term 23 00:01:37,160 --> 00:01:40,720 Speaker 1: and long term challenges right now, and probably the number 24 00:01:40,720 --> 00:01:43,920 Speaker 1: one thing is the poor performance of the economy. While 25 00:01:44,000 --> 00:01:46,920 Speaker 1: former President Trump kept up his attack on Republicans who 26 00:01:46,959 --> 00:01:50,600 Speaker 1: supported his impeachment, so Congressman Liz Cheney of Wyalming said 27 00:01:50,640 --> 00:01:54,240 Speaker 1: she wouldn't stop even after she was soundly beaten in 28 00:01:54,320 --> 00:01:58,600 Speaker 1: her primary. I have said since January six that I 29 00:01:58,600 --> 00:02:01,600 Speaker 1: will do whatever it takes to ensure Donald Trump is 30 00:02:01,680 --> 00:02:04,960 Speaker 1: never again anywhere near the Oval Office, and I mean it. 31 00:02:06,040 --> 00:02:09,200 Speaker 1: And there was nothing subtle about the inflation signal we 32 00:02:09,280 --> 00:02:11,840 Speaker 1: got out of Great Britain, coming in over ten percent 33 00:02:12,280 --> 00:02:16,240 Speaker 1: and apparently headed even higher. I'd go to the UK way. 34 00:02:16,240 --> 00:02:19,919 Speaker 1: You're seeing an explosive move higher in UK guilt yields 35 00:02:20,120 --> 00:02:21,800 Speaker 1: tom and I don't think I'm o a divnt us 36 00:02:21,840 --> 00:02:24,600 Speaker 1: in that language. But the Fed, well, the FED was 37 00:02:24,639 --> 00:02:27,440 Speaker 1: a little less clear in the minutes from its July meeting, 38 00:02:27,680 --> 00:02:30,519 Speaker 1: with the nuance balancing of the concern over timing too 39 00:02:30,600 --> 00:02:36,280 Speaker 1: much and concern over inflation expectations becoming entrenched. Reading the minutes, 40 00:02:36,360 --> 00:02:38,600 Speaker 1: you have to feel that this is a sort of 41 00:02:38,600 --> 00:02:42,160 Speaker 1: a dovish lead, and it supports Chairman J. Powell's tone 42 00:02:42,440 --> 00:02:46,680 Speaker 1: at the news conference following the June meeting. Beneficials noted 43 00:02:46,760 --> 00:02:49,760 Speaker 1: that some parts of the economy, notably housing, we're starting 44 00:02:49,760 --> 00:02:54,520 Speaker 1: to slow as a result of higher interest rates. And 45 00:02:54,600 --> 00:02:56,720 Speaker 1: if you wanted confirmation of just how I'm big, as 46 00:02:56,720 --> 00:02:58,720 Speaker 1: those Fed minutes were, just take a look at the 47 00:02:58,760 --> 00:03:01,960 Speaker 1: markets this week, with the some shooting up on Tuesday, 48 00:03:02,160 --> 00:03:05,200 Speaker 1: when we'll fall back down to earth and beyond on Friday, 49 00:03:05,360 --> 00:03:08,720 Speaker 1: ending the week down one point two eight and the 50 00:03:08,840 --> 00:03:12,560 Speaker 1: NASDAC was even worse again, climbing nicely earlier in the week, 51 00:03:12,639 --> 00:03:15,440 Speaker 1: only to plunge on Friday, ending up down two point 52 00:03:15,520 --> 00:03:18,840 Speaker 1: six percent. Helped, no doubt, by concern about bonds, with 53 00:03:18,960 --> 00:03:22,080 Speaker 1: the yield on the ten year rising fourteen basis points 54 00:03:22,120 --> 00:03:24,640 Speaker 1: for the week and ending up just under three percent 55 00:03:24,919 --> 00:03:27,600 Speaker 1: at two point nine seven. To help us understand what 56 00:03:27,639 --> 00:03:29,680 Speaker 1: the markets may be trying to tell us, Welcome now, 57 00:03:29,720 --> 00:03:33,200 Speaker 1: Bob Prince. He's co Chief Investment Officers for Bridgewater Associates 58 00:03:33,320 --> 00:03:35,440 Speaker 1: and Ed Hyman, Chair of ever Cores I s I 59 00:03:35,600 --> 00:03:38,160 Speaker 1: and Vice chair of ever Core Partners. So welcome both 60 00:03:38,200 --> 00:03:40,120 Speaker 1: of you back to Walster. We gets really a pleasure 61 00:03:40,120 --> 00:03:41,800 Speaker 1: to have you. And let me start with you. You 62 00:03:41,840 --> 00:03:43,920 Speaker 1: follow the economy and what's going on with the economy. 63 00:03:44,040 --> 00:03:46,360 Speaker 1: We've talked about the markets, We've talked about the FED. 64 00:03:46,800 --> 00:03:50,520 Speaker 1: What's the economy telling us? Well, the economy has two 65 00:03:50,520 --> 00:03:54,080 Speaker 1: parts to it. Obviously, one part is what real GDP 66 00:03:54,320 --> 00:03:58,000 Speaker 1: is there auto sales. Then there's inflation, and inflation is 67 00:03:58,080 --> 00:04:01,200 Speaker 1: by far the more important part right now. But on 68 00:04:01,240 --> 00:04:06,120 Speaker 1: the first part, Uh, the economy is doing okay. As 69 00:04:06,160 --> 00:04:10,240 Speaker 1: you know, we survey companies and our retail survey dropped 70 00:04:10,240 --> 00:04:13,880 Speaker 1: sharply this week but still pretty elevated. Housing is really 71 00:04:13,920 --> 00:04:17,800 Speaker 1: getting hit. But on balanced, economy is doing okay. I 72 00:04:17,800 --> 00:04:22,960 Speaker 1: think it's probably growing two or three but headed to one. Uh. 73 00:04:23,240 --> 00:04:26,080 Speaker 1: The recount, I'm sorry, bank bank loans came out this 74 00:04:26,160 --> 00:04:30,160 Speaker 1: afternoon and they're up eleven percent now, Uh, and retail 75 00:04:30,200 --> 00:04:34,640 Speaker 1: sales this week, we're you know, pretty decent on inflation, 76 00:04:34,680 --> 00:04:39,000 Speaker 1: which is much more important. UM, I'm pretty convinced that 77 00:04:39,040 --> 00:04:43,600 Speaker 1: inflation is slowing of oil prices came down. Gasoline prices 78 00:04:43,640 --> 00:04:49,159 Speaker 1: came down, and in the weeds, used car prices dropped 79 00:04:49,160 --> 00:04:54,480 Speaker 1: about three in the latest month. And we survey retailers 80 00:04:54,520 --> 00:04:58,120 Speaker 1: pricing power that's now plunging. You've heard the stories about 81 00:04:58,160 --> 00:05:01,320 Speaker 1: the inventories being high, and we have been tracking that 82 00:05:01,400 --> 00:05:05,080 Speaker 1: for a long time. It's now really coming down. But 83 00:05:05,160 --> 00:05:07,520 Speaker 1: the most important part, and we don't get much data 84 00:05:07,560 --> 00:05:10,920 Speaker 1: on this, or wages, And obviously the labor markets are 85 00:05:11,000 --> 00:05:14,320 Speaker 1: very tight, but they had from the conference board this 86 00:05:14,360 --> 00:05:19,479 Speaker 1: week a measure of CEO confidence was almost a record low, 87 00:05:20,640 --> 00:05:27,640 Speaker 1: and another survey UH that showed of workers were concerned 88 00:05:27,640 --> 00:05:33,400 Speaker 1: about losing their job. Go figure that. Uh. But we 89 00:05:33,440 --> 00:05:37,160 Speaker 1: serve as employment agencies every week UH and ask them, 90 00:05:37,440 --> 00:05:40,560 Speaker 1: among other things, about wage pressure. And that's now pretty 91 00:05:40,560 --> 00:05:43,520 Speaker 1: clearly hooked down. So I think you're beginning to see 92 00:05:44,000 --> 00:05:47,880 Speaker 1: some moderation in wages on top of you know, prices 93 00:05:47,960 --> 00:05:51,960 Speaker 1: now cooling and the economy is cooling. So Bob Ed's 94 00:05:51,960 --> 00:05:54,880 Speaker 1: seas inflation started to come down. The question is how 95 00:05:54,920 --> 00:05:57,080 Speaker 1: fast it's coming down but starting to come down, how 96 00:05:57,080 --> 00:05:59,000 Speaker 1: do you see it? And is it coming down enough 97 00:05:59,040 --> 00:06:00,919 Speaker 1: and fast enough so the FED will not have to 98 00:06:00,960 --> 00:06:05,520 Speaker 1: go much further in rate hikes. It's definitely on the down. 99 00:06:06,160 --> 00:06:10,040 Speaker 1: But the question is where as it settled out, and um, 100 00:06:10,080 --> 00:06:12,520 Speaker 1: and doesn't settle out at the level that the Fed 101 00:06:12,600 --> 00:06:15,359 Speaker 1: expects it too, and that the markets are discounting. The 102 00:06:15,440 --> 00:06:18,719 Speaker 1: markets are discounting two and a half and you know 103 00:06:18,760 --> 00:06:22,040 Speaker 1: we're coming down from six so or higher on the 104 00:06:22,040 --> 00:06:27,200 Speaker 1: core right so, but there are really two big imbalances 105 00:06:27,240 --> 00:06:30,520 Speaker 1: in the economy right now that are need to be 106 00:06:30,560 --> 00:06:33,800 Speaker 1: resolved through this tightening cycle. And we're still in this 107 00:06:33,960 --> 00:06:37,880 Speaker 1: tightening cycle. Um, it's it's too early to really see 108 00:06:37,920 --> 00:06:40,839 Speaker 1: the effects. It hasn't been that long to see the effects, 109 00:06:40,880 --> 00:06:43,040 Speaker 1: and so chances are you're going to get more of 110 00:06:43,080 --> 00:06:45,960 Speaker 1: that weakness as you as you go along. Bob Princeton 111 00:06:46,120 --> 00:06:48,320 Speaker 1: Ed Kimon will be back with us for more Wall 112 00:06:48,320 --> 00:06:59,919 Speaker 1: Street Week after the break. This is Bloomberg Wall Street 113 00:07:00,040 --> 00:07:10,960 Speaker 1: Week with David Weston from Bloomberg Radio. New construction contracts faltered, 114 00:07:11,000 --> 00:07:15,440 Speaker 1: and while unemployment actually went down, more significant was back 115 00:07:15,480 --> 00:07:20,400 Speaker 1: to back monthly declines and paying jobs. The bottom line 116 00:07:20,440 --> 00:07:23,840 Speaker 1: seemed to be that the economy was beginning to move forward, 117 00:07:24,360 --> 00:07:28,320 Speaker 1: but with many a lagging part and overall at a 118 00:07:28,440 --> 00:07:33,240 Speaker 1: pace that would embarrass a tortoise. That was Lewis Rockeys 119 00:07:33,280 --> 00:07:36,320 Speaker 1: around Wall Street week Back in August, when the United 120 00:07:36,320 --> 00:07:38,680 Speaker 1: States had just come off of a relatively mild and 121 00:07:38,680 --> 00:07:41,560 Speaker 1: short recession. The number one song, if you remember, was 122 00:07:41,600 --> 00:07:44,000 Speaker 1: Brian Adams Everything I Do, I Do It for You, 123 00:07:44,360 --> 00:07:47,800 Speaker 1: and the top movie was Terminator to Judgment Day. Still 124 00:07:47,800 --> 00:07:50,520 Speaker 1: with us are Bob Princeton, Bridgewater and Ed Hyman. Of ever, course, 125 00:07:50,560 --> 00:07:52,400 Speaker 1: so it's a bit of a different world today. Bob, 126 00:07:52,480 --> 00:07:54,520 Speaker 1: for example, on the job situation, we still have a 127 00:07:54,520 --> 00:07:58,600 Speaker 1: pretty robust jobs economy. But from everything we discussed before 128 00:07:58,840 --> 00:08:01,080 Speaker 1: about the uncertainty of we are on the tightening cycle, 129 00:08:01,160 --> 00:08:05,040 Speaker 1: what comes next? What is that stage? To an investor, Well, 130 00:08:05,120 --> 00:08:08,040 Speaker 1: right now, we're in an in between stage right now right, 131 00:08:08,240 --> 00:08:10,320 Speaker 1: so you if you, if you go back, just not 132 00:08:10,360 --> 00:08:13,760 Speaker 1: too many months ago, it became evident that we had 133 00:08:13,800 --> 00:08:16,280 Speaker 1: a self sustaining inflation, that there was going to be 134 00:08:16,320 --> 00:08:19,520 Speaker 1: a tightening monetary policy. The markets price that in yields 135 00:08:19,520 --> 00:08:23,480 Speaker 1: went up. You got the tightening of policy. It's still happening. 136 00:08:24,040 --> 00:08:28,119 Speaker 1: It's not over. Uh. Markets got a little bit excited 137 00:08:28,120 --> 00:08:30,240 Speaker 1: about to dip in some of the inflation. They started 138 00:08:30,200 --> 00:08:34,120 Speaker 1: to bite on that yield, but that we've already given 139 00:08:34,200 --> 00:08:37,200 Speaker 1: up half of the yield rise that occurred, and that 140 00:08:37,240 --> 00:08:39,360 Speaker 1: actually means if it needs to do more than if 141 00:08:39,360 --> 00:08:42,480 Speaker 1: the yields had stayed up where they were right, including equity. 142 00:08:42,600 --> 00:08:46,960 Speaker 1: So so we're still in this thing. We're still in 143 00:08:47,040 --> 00:08:50,640 Speaker 1: this tightening cycle. And like I said, there are really 144 00:08:51,160 --> 00:08:53,000 Speaker 1: there's going to be a mixture of three things, and 145 00:08:53,040 --> 00:08:55,280 Speaker 1: you don't know what the mixes yet because it's too 146 00:08:55,280 --> 00:08:57,240 Speaker 1: early to tell, but you're going to get some mixture 147 00:08:57,240 --> 00:09:01,320 Speaker 1: of wheat growth, high inflation, and rising interest rates. The 148 00:09:01,400 --> 00:09:05,120 Speaker 1: more the interest rates rise, the more it's the weak growth. 149 00:09:06,000 --> 00:09:08,040 Speaker 1: The less the interest rate rise, the more it's the 150 00:09:08,120 --> 00:09:11,520 Speaker 1: high inflation because and if the fit takes the foot 151 00:09:11,520 --> 00:09:14,640 Speaker 1: off the brake, you're gonna that inflation improvement is going 152 00:09:14,679 --> 00:09:16,360 Speaker 1: to go away, and they're gonna, you know, and they're 153 00:09:16,400 --> 00:09:19,880 Speaker 1: gonna favor growth. So you don't know which, which which 154 00:09:20,000 --> 00:09:22,640 Speaker 1: how they're going to play it quite yet. So what 155 00:09:22,720 --> 00:09:24,920 Speaker 1: we try to do in this kind of environment is 156 00:09:26,000 --> 00:09:30,720 Speaker 1: maintain some balance, right diversification obviously, don't not too heavily 157 00:09:30,760 --> 00:09:33,920 Speaker 1: committed to any one direction, but also even within the 158 00:09:33,960 --> 00:09:38,200 Speaker 1: equity market, um, you know, structuring equity portfolios that have 159 00:09:38,320 --> 00:09:42,760 Speaker 1: a cash flow and balance sheet base under them, so 160 00:09:42,840 --> 00:09:46,400 Speaker 1: that if you tightening is very aggressive, that there's a 161 00:09:46,440 --> 00:09:49,240 Speaker 1: strong enough balance sheet to hold that up to to 162 00:09:49,280 --> 00:09:53,480 Speaker 1: sustain their their their position in the markets, or uh, 163 00:09:53,679 --> 00:09:56,760 Speaker 1: sustain a positive cash flow. UH. And I think that 164 00:09:56,800 --> 00:09:59,240 Speaker 1: the companies that are you have a lot of debt 165 00:09:59,280 --> 00:10:03,319 Speaker 1: in relation price value or vulnerable profit margins, that sort 166 00:10:03,360 --> 00:10:06,080 Speaker 1: of thing, um, you know, are the are the type 167 00:10:06,120 --> 00:10:08,679 Speaker 1: that are most vulnerable for that environment. So it sounds 168 00:10:08,679 --> 00:10:11,240 Speaker 1: like an awful lot of hinges on the FED. Surprise surprise, 169 00:10:11,360 --> 00:10:14,640 Speaker 1: Jackson Hole coming up next week. Okay, a lot of 170 00:10:14,679 --> 00:10:16,760 Speaker 1: people are gonna pay attention to j pals to say, 171 00:10:16,760 --> 00:10:18,840 Speaker 1: if we remember last year at this he was talking 172 00:10:18,840 --> 00:10:21,720 Speaker 1: about transitory still that doesn't work so well this year. 173 00:10:22,080 --> 00:10:24,440 Speaker 1: So how much guidance can the FED give us about 174 00:10:24,480 --> 00:10:26,280 Speaker 1: exactly where they're heading on some of the questions that 175 00:10:26,320 --> 00:10:28,360 Speaker 1: Bob just talked about, Well, it's hard to hard to know. 176 00:10:29,360 --> 00:10:32,240 Speaker 1: I do think we're going to get a financial crisis 177 00:10:32,360 --> 00:10:36,440 Speaker 1: some queer somewhere pretty soon. It's always been part of 178 00:10:36,440 --> 00:10:40,640 Speaker 1: the of the tightening cycle. But like you point out, David, 179 00:10:41,000 --> 00:10:45,280 Speaker 1: you know, last year it was really about transitory. He 180 00:10:45,400 --> 00:10:49,080 Speaker 1: had five differ you which you went through five different 181 00:10:49,080 --> 00:10:53,000 Speaker 1: things that would prove transitory. And I personally think the 182 00:10:53,040 --> 00:10:55,640 Speaker 1: FED is now on the other side of the wrong foot. 183 00:10:56,280 --> 00:11:00,200 Speaker 1: You know, now they're doing the entrenched and uh, you know, 184 00:11:00,240 --> 00:11:02,120 Speaker 1: a year ago I thought Bonnio could go to five 185 00:11:02,120 --> 00:11:04,839 Speaker 1: percent and FED funds go to five percent, and I'm 186 00:11:04,880 --> 00:11:07,120 Speaker 1: not quite sure what's happened. But you know, money growth 187 00:11:07,160 --> 00:11:12,319 Speaker 1: DIDs slow dramatically, and commity prices have come down dramatically, 188 00:11:12,880 --> 00:11:15,920 Speaker 1: and now I'm saying pricing power coming down. And so 189 00:11:16,040 --> 00:11:18,439 Speaker 1: I think we've made a lot more progress on inflation 190 00:11:18,679 --> 00:11:21,480 Speaker 1: than I expected. And that's why the market was going 191 00:11:21,559 --> 00:11:26,480 Speaker 1: up until today. But that's that's if inflation keeps coming down, uh, 192 00:11:26,679 --> 00:11:30,400 Speaker 1: then the market is gonna appreciate that. So one thing 193 00:11:30,400 --> 00:11:33,360 Speaker 1: I don't understand, Bob, we heard why ED thinks the 194 00:11:33,400 --> 00:11:35,800 Speaker 1: FEDS job maybe it's gotten easier actually with some of 195 00:11:35,840 --> 00:11:38,640 Speaker 1: the things that have happened, But financial conditions actually have 196 00:11:38,760 --> 00:11:41,920 Speaker 1: not tightened. Actually, if anything, that in someone looser that 197 00:11:41,960 --> 00:11:45,360 Speaker 1: makes the FEDS job harder. In recent weeks, yeah, I 198 00:11:45,360 --> 00:11:47,520 Speaker 1: mean the first half, the first half of the year, 199 00:11:48,080 --> 00:11:50,720 Speaker 1: literally the first quarter of the markets were doing the 200 00:11:50,760 --> 00:11:54,880 Speaker 1: fed's job entirely, and then the FED joined in. And 201 00:11:54,960 --> 00:11:57,240 Speaker 1: once the FED joined in and the markets saw some 202 00:11:57,440 --> 00:12:00,640 Speaker 1: you know, positive signs of inflation, you know, they actually 203 00:12:00,679 --> 00:12:04,120 Speaker 1: pulled back, and so bond yields came back down, equity yields, 204 00:12:04,120 --> 00:12:08,800 Speaker 1: you know, came back down. Um. And so you know that, 205 00:12:08,920 --> 00:12:11,840 Speaker 1: as you said, about half of the tightening that the 206 00:12:11,880 --> 00:12:17,240 Speaker 1: markets were applying has been retracted. If if yields had 207 00:12:17,240 --> 00:12:20,400 Speaker 1: stayed where they were, uh, it would be that much 208 00:12:20,520 --> 00:12:22,520 Speaker 1: less that the FED needs to do. But the fact 209 00:12:22,520 --> 00:12:25,120 Speaker 1: that the yields have actually dropped some and kind of 210 00:12:25,160 --> 00:12:26,960 Speaker 1: given back some of the work that they were doing, 211 00:12:27,000 --> 00:12:30,319 Speaker 1: it's that much more that the FED needs to do. Um. 212 00:12:30,400 --> 00:12:33,840 Speaker 1: And so I think you know it's into ed referred 213 00:12:33,840 --> 00:12:35,920 Speaker 1: to the last you know you you you raised it, 214 00:12:35,960 --> 00:12:37,920 Speaker 1: and then you know, we talked about last year's Jackson 215 00:12:37,960 --> 00:12:44,160 Speaker 1: whole speech bit. Um. They were clearly wrong about transitory inflation. 216 00:12:44,720 --> 00:12:47,120 Speaker 1: If you actually look at the indicators that they followed, 217 00:12:47,160 --> 00:12:51,040 Speaker 1: they tend to be lagging indicators. UM. I haven't heard 218 00:12:51,120 --> 00:12:55,240 Speaker 1: yet an explanation about how they think inflation, why they 219 00:12:55,280 --> 00:12:57,400 Speaker 1: think there is an inflation, why they think that that 220 00:12:57,520 --> 00:13:01,480 Speaker 1: was wrong. And I think that that cau caused you 221 00:13:01,520 --> 00:13:05,559 Speaker 1: to question how well this this process is going to 222 00:13:05,640 --> 00:13:07,920 Speaker 1: be managed, just gonna be very tricky. Well, and that's 223 00:13:07,920 --> 00:13:10,120 Speaker 1: a really powerful point. I think. Does the Fed need 224 00:13:10,160 --> 00:13:12,000 Speaker 1: to explain to us what went wrong and why they're 225 00:13:12,000 --> 00:13:14,000 Speaker 1: not going to do a mistake again for us to 226 00:13:14,000 --> 00:13:16,640 Speaker 1: really believe in this time it would be helpful. But 227 00:13:16,880 --> 00:13:19,720 Speaker 1: you know, from my vantage point, as you can see, 228 00:13:20,760 --> 00:13:24,640 Speaker 1: what they missed was that fiscal stimulus, quantitative easing led 229 00:13:24,679 --> 00:13:27,319 Speaker 1: to increase in the money supply, and that did it. 230 00:13:28,040 --> 00:13:31,360 Speaker 1: And if you look back at that Jackson hole, they 231 00:13:31,400 --> 00:13:35,839 Speaker 1: completely missed that. Now money growth is plunging and my 232 00:13:36,000 --> 00:13:39,320 Speaker 1: prices are coming down, all sorts of signs that early signs, 233 00:13:39,840 --> 00:13:42,679 Speaker 1: and so the job not over by any means. Do 234 00:13:42,720 --> 00:13:45,240 Speaker 1: you agree with Ed that in all likely we'll have 235 00:13:45,280 --> 00:13:47,840 Speaker 1: some sort of financial crisis, that that's what happening happens 236 00:13:47,840 --> 00:13:54,120 Speaker 1: in serious tightening cycles. Uh, odds are pretty good. Yeah, yeah, 237 00:13:54,160 --> 00:13:56,280 Speaker 1: I mean we haven't had enough tightening get to really 238 00:13:56,320 --> 00:13:59,920 Speaker 1: have that, But um, odds are good. Yeah. I mean 239 00:14:00,160 --> 00:14:02,319 Speaker 1: we haven't had the downturn yet. If there's gonna be 240 00:14:02,320 --> 00:14:05,000 Speaker 1: a downturn, it hasn't happened yet. It's gonna be hard 241 00:14:05,040 --> 00:14:08,320 Speaker 1: to bring inflation down. How are you going to bring 242 00:14:08,360 --> 00:14:13,360 Speaker 1: nominal spending down from ten percent to five without a 243 00:14:13,440 --> 00:14:17,160 Speaker 1: significant contraction? And credit? You need to slow credit growth 244 00:14:17,200 --> 00:14:19,400 Speaker 1: by about half. Money growth is slowed, but you need 245 00:14:19,440 --> 00:14:21,680 Speaker 1: to slow credit growth in half. But it's still rising. 246 00:14:22,240 --> 00:14:24,400 Speaker 1: You're gonna have to You're gonna have to hold interest 247 00:14:24,480 --> 00:14:26,960 Speaker 1: rates up enough. And that's when things that's when bad 248 00:14:27,000 --> 00:14:28,720 Speaker 1: things happen. I have to tell you this is not 249 00:14:28,760 --> 00:14:30,080 Speaker 1: a bad thing. It's a real treat. They had the 250 00:14:30,080 --> 00:14:31,640 Speaker 1: two of you here on Wall Street. We really thank 251 00:14:31,640 --> 00:14:34,080 Speaker 1: you so much. That is Ed Hyman of Evercourt and 252 00:14:34,160 --> 00:14:37,960 Speaker 1: Bob Prince of Bridgewater coming up. Do you know what 253 00:14:38,000 --> 00:14:40,800 Speaker 1: Warren Buffett says about the tide going out? Well, some 254 00:14:40,960 --> 00:14:43,200 Speaker 1: of those who may be caught are those so called 255 00:14:43,480 --> 00:14:46,560 Speaker 1: zombie companies who've loaded up on debt when it was cheap. 256 00:14:47,240 --> 00:14:50,400 Speaker 1: You talked about the risks and possible opportunities with selling 257 00:14:50,440 --> 00:14:54,680 Speaker 1: your gifts of the Institute for International Finance. That's next 258 00:14:54,680 --> 00:14:59,560 Speaker 1: on Wall Street Week on Bloomberg. This is Bloomberg Wall 259 00:14:59,640 --> 00:15:11,600 Speaker 1: Street Week with David Weston from Bloomberg Radio. It was 260 00:15:11,720 --> 00:15:14,880 Speaker 1: nice while it lasted, all that support from the Fed 261 00:15:15,240 --> 00:15:18,160 Speaker 1: from zero interest rates. We continue to expect it will 262 00:15:18,160 --> 00:15:21,240 Speaker 1: be appropriate to maintain the current zero to one percent 263 00:15:21,360 --> 00:15:24,080 Speaker 1: target range for the Feller Funds rate. To pumping money 264 00:15:24,160 --> 00:15:28,120 Speaker 1: into the economy. More directly, we are deploying these lending 265 00:15:28,160 --> 00:15:31,960 Speaker 1: powers to an unprecedented extent, enabled in large part by 266 00:15:32,120 --> 00:15:35,040 Speaker 1: the financial backing from the Congress and the Treasury. We 267 00:15:35,080 --> 00:15:38,840 Speaker 1: will continue to use these powers forcefully, proactively, and aggressively 268 00:15:39,120 --> 00:15:41,360 Speaker 1: until we're confident that we are solidly on the road 269 00:15:41,400 --> 00:15:44,240 Speaker 1: to recovery. All of which allowed companies to borrow as 270 00:15:44,360 --> 00:15:47,440 Speaker 1: much as they wanted, which was worrying to Russ Kastrick 271 00:15:47,760 --> 00:15:50,640 Speaker 1: of Black Rock as much as four years ago. The 272 00:15:50,800 --> 00:15:52,960 Speaker 1: eight pound guerrilla, which eventually we're all going to have 273 00:15:53,000 --> 00:15:55,520 Speaker 1: to question, is whether or not that's built up in 274 00:15:55,560 --> 00:15:57,880 Speaker 1: corporate leverage which we've seen over the past three or 275 00:15:57,920 --> 00:16:02,240 Speaker 1: four years, is that sustainable. Now those happy days are over, 276 00:16:02,680 --> 00:16:05,400 Speaker 1: as the Fed has reversed course and says it will 277 00:16:05,480 --> 00:16:09,680 Speaker 1: keep raising rates until the inflation dragon is slain. The 278 00:16:09,720 --> 00:16:13,000 Speaker 1: idea that we're going to start cutting rates early next 279 00:16:13,080 --> 00:16:15,840 Speaker 1: year when inflation is very likely going to be well 280 00:16:15,960 --> 00:16:18,520 Speaker 1: well well in excess of our target. I just think 281 00:16:18,520 --> 00:16:21,120 Speaker 1: it's not realistic. Where does that leave all those companies 282 00:16:21,120 --> 00:16:23,760 Speaker 1: who have borrowed so much, Well, at least some of 283 00:16:23,760 --> 00:16:31,120 Speaker 1: them are so called zombies. No, not those zombies, companies 284 00:16:31,120 --> 00:16:34,200 Speaker 1: that don't generate enough cash to pay their debt. And 285 00:16:34,280 --> 00:16:37,640 Speaker 1: that leads economists like Neural Robini to say, we're going 286 00:16:37,720 --> 00:16:40,800 Speaker 1: to see some of them fail, which may just be 287 00:16:40,960 --> 00:16:43,640 Speaker 1: what we needed to get to the other side. There 288 00:16:43,640 --> 00:16:46,680 Speaker 1: are tons of firms that were highly leverage, you didn't 289 00:16:46,680 --> 00:16:49,880 Speaker 1: have much profits, that were zombie that would have gone fast. 290 00:16:50,000 --> 00:16:53,800 Speaker 1: But during COVID we bailed out. Everybody's zero rate, negative rates, 291 00:16:53,880 --> 00:16:56,280 Speaker 1: wants toy easy, credit easy, not that they we have 292 00:16:56,320 --> 00:17:00,240 Speaker 1: to tighten as inflation is higher. The zombe is not 293 00:17:00,240 --> 00:17:05,960 Speaker 1: going too And to thank us to the strange and 294 00:17:05,960 --> 00:17:09,159 Speaker 1: exotic world of zombie companies, we welcome now Sonya Gibbs. 295 00:17:09,280 --> 00:17:12,919 Speaker 1: She's managing director and headed Sustainable Finance at the Institute 296 00:17:12,960 --> 00:17:15,359 Speaker 1: of International Finance. So Sonia, thank you so much for 297 00:17:15,440 --> 00:17:17,320 Speaker 1: joining us on Wall Street Week. Let me start with 298 00:17:17,359 --> 00:17:20,679 Speaker 1: those basic of questions, what exactly is the zombie company 299 00:17:20,720 --> 00:17:23,800 Speaker 1: and how many of them are they're out there? First 300 00:17:23,800 --> 00:17:25,719 Speaker 1: of all, to take a step back, what you need 301 00:17:25,760 --> 00:17:28,200 Speaker 1: to think about is that over the past ten or 302 00:17:28,280 --> 00:17:33,000 Speaker 1: fifteen years, global debt levels have skyrocketed. We've had very 303 00:17:33,000 --> 00:17:36,920 Speaker 1: low interest rates, and for example, non financial corporate debt 304 00:17:36,960 --> 00:17:40,040 Speaker 1: around the world is now close to a of g 305 00:17:40,160 --> 00:17:43,480 Speaker 1: d P and that's more than double what it was 306 00:17:43,520 --> 00:17:47,320 Speaker 1: a decade ago. So that's a very worrying backdrop. And 307 00:17:47,359 --> 00:17:50,119 Speaker 1: so what we mean by zombie companies is a company 308 00:17:50,200 --> 00:17:55,200 Speaker 1: that essentially has to borrow to keep going. They're highly leveraged, 309 00:17:55,600 --> 00:17:58,239 Speaker 1: they're not growing very fast, their revenues are not up 310 00:17:58,280 --> 00:18:01,320 Speaker 1: to power, and at the want they face a very 311 00:18:01,359 --> 00:18:05,720 Speaker 1: difficult situation. You've got higher input costs, so your commodity 312 00:18:05,840 --> 00:18:09,679 Speaker 1: prices are higher, wages are rising. At the same time, 313 00:18:10,359 --> 00:18:13,480 Speaker 1: you don't earn enough revenue to cover all of these 314 00:18:13,560 --> 00:18:17,360 Speaker 1: higher costs and your debt service. So if you have 315 00:18:17,560 --> 00:18:22,320 Speaker 1: a ratio of revenues to interest costs that's one or less. 316 00:18:22,400 --> 00:18:25,040 Speaker 1: If you can barely cover your debt service costs, we 317 00:18:25,119 --> 00:18:28,080 Speaker 1: call you a zombie company. And it's a very good name. 318 00:18:28,160 --> 00:18:31,520 Speaker 1: It's very evocative. And for how many I mean, it's 319 00:18:31,520 --> 00:18:34,919 Speaker 1: difficult to calculate, right, because for a lot of firms that, 320 00:18:34,960 --> 00:18:38,800 Speaker 1: for example, aren't publicly listed, the information might be less available. 321 00:18:39,080 --> 00:18:43,080 Speaker 1: They might be smaller non public companies, but the Federal 322 00:18:43,119 --> 00:18:47,560 Speaker 1: Reserve estimates that between five and ten percent of US 323 00:18:47,640 --> 00:18:51,440 Speaker 1: firms fall into this category. It's also important to remember 324 00:18:51,720 --> 00:18:55,160 Speaker 1: that this is not a static world. It's not once 325 00:18:55,200 --> 00:18:59,639 Speaker 1: a zombie, always a zombie. Conditions change, and in fact, 326 00:19:00,000 --> 00:19:02,959 Speaker 1: coming a zombie company is a little bit cyclical in 327 00:19:03,000 --> 00:19:06,000 Speaker 1: the sense that when times are good, maybe interest rates 328 00:19:06,000 --> 00:19:09,120 Speaker 1: are low, growth is high, maybe you're not a zombie, 329 00:19:09,800 --> 00:19:13,879 Speaker 1: but then you know, bad things happen, pandemics happen, shocks happen, 330 00:19:14,280 --> 00:19:17,480 Speaker 1: interest rates go up, and a company that was formally 331 00:19:17,880 --> 00:19:22,879 Speaker 1: doing reasonably well might suddenly fall into the zombie category. 332 00:19:23,880 --> 00:19:26,560 Speaker 1: So so you mentioned the overall debt load is true 333 00:19:26,560 --> 00:19:27,840 Speaker 1: st in the United States and not just in the 334 00:19:27,920 --> 00:19:30,479 Speaker 1: United States, in part because interest rates are so low. 335 00:19:30,520 --> 00:19:33,239 Speaker 1: There's a very, very successful, healthy companies that loaded up 336 00:19:33,240 --> 00:19:36,360 Speaker 1: on debt because it was so cheap. But whenever we've 337 00:19:36,359 --> 00:19:38,800 Speaker 1: talked about this risk in the last few years, they said, 338 00:19:38,840 --> 00:19:41,159 Speaker 1: don't worry. As long as interest rates are low, we're fine. 339 00:19:41,480 --> 00:19:43,600 Speaker 1: It looks like those days maybe on their way out, 340 00:19:43,600 --> 00:19:45,520 Speaker 1: we're gonna have higher interest rates. So what kind of 341 00:19:45,560 --> 00:19:48,320 Speaker 1: pressures that put on these zombie companies. Well, I think 342 00:19:48,320 --> 00:19:51,640 Speaker 1: it's a good analogy. Right. It's all fine until it's not. 343 00:19:51,920 --> 00:19:54,320 Speaker 1: And so you've had a kind of a confluence of 344 00:19:54,400 --> 00:19:57,359 Speaker 1: factors that have hit pretty much at the same time. 345 00:19:57,720 --> 00:20:00,960 Speaker 1: You had a pandemic which hit growth, had a commodity 346 00:20:01,000 --> 00:20:04,720 Speaker 1: price shock, you have rising inflation, you have higher interest rates, 347 00:20:05,320 --> 00:20:08,760 Speaker 1: and you also have firms whose whose business models, for example, 348 00:20:08,840 --> 00:20:13,400 Speaker 1: have been entirely changed by the pandemic. I mean, amongst 349 00:20:13,400 --> 00:20:16,000 Speaker 1: the list of zombie companies, you might find a company 350 00:20:16,040 --> 00:20:18,280 Speaker 1: like we Work, you know, a company that has been 351 00:20:18,400 --> 00:20:21,440 Speaker 1: very successful, but at the same time the pandemic has 352 00:20:21,520 --> 00:20:23,760 Speaker 1: changed a lot of things for that for that company. 353 00:20:23,800 --> 00:20:26,680 Speaker 1: Carnival Cruise Lines is another good example of a type 354 00:20:26,680 --> 00:20:29,840 Speaker 1: of company who's now in the zombie category. Or some 355 00:20:29,960 --> 00:20:32,959 Speaker 1: of the meme stocks, you know, a mc R game stop. 356 00:20:33,119 --> 00:20:36,240 Speaker 1: So these are really household names. Sonia, thank you so 357 00:20:36,359 --> 00:20:38,760 Speaker 1: much for that tour of the exotic world of zombie 358 00:20:38,760 --> 00:20:41,520 Speaker 1: companies that Sonya gives. She is from the Institute of 359 00:20:41,640 --> 00:20:45,960 Speaker 1: International Finance, plans you to be here. Coming up, we 360 00:20:46,040 --> 00:20:49,080 Speaker 1: wrap up our week with special contributor Larry Summers of Harvard. 361 00:20:50,840 --> 00:21:00,720 Speaker 1: This is Wall Street Week on Bloomberg. This is Walter. 362 00:21:01,000 --> 00:21:03,000 Speaker 1: I'm David Weston. We're gonna wrap up the week once 363 00:21:03,040 --> 00:21:06,080 Speaker 1: again with our special contributer Larry Summers of Harvard. Larry, 364 00:21:06,119 --> 00:21:08,080 Speaker 1: thanks so much for being back with us. So let's 365 00:21:08,080 --> 00:21:11,119 Speaker 1: start with those Fed minutes that everybody was waiting for eagerly, 366 00:21:11,960 --> 00:21:14,480 Speaker 1: and they came out. The markets didn't know quite what 367 00:21:14,600 --> 00:21:16,240 Speaker 1: to do with them. What did you make out of 368 00:21:16,240 --> 00:21:21,359 Speaker 1: those minutes? They confirmed what I suspected, which was that 369 00:21:21,520 --> 00:21:25,959 Speaker 1: the FED doesn't know where it is, that the world 370 00:21:26,080 --> 00:21:31,359 Speaker 1: is very ambiguous at this point, and minutes of a 371 00:21:31,480 --> 00:21:39,399 Speaker 1: meeting are a very poor way to convey a collective message. Look, 372 00:21:39,440 --> 00:21:44,639 Speaker 1: the FED has a fundamental problem about which it is 373 00:21:45,160 --> 00:21:49,200 Speaker 1: not yet willing to be realistic, and that is that 374 00:21:49,280 --> 00:21:53,600 Speaker 1: it is exceedingly unlikely that inflation can be brought down 375 00:21:53,640 --> 00:21:58,800 Speaker 1: to target levels without a substantial increase in unemployment. They 376 00:21:59,400 --> 00:22:06,399 Speaker 1: launt to be very concerned about unemployment and about inflation, 377 00:22:06,640 --> 00:22:10,359 Speaker 1: and the reality is that it's probably not so realistic 378 00:22:10,440 --> 00:22:13,480 Speaker 1: to think that they're going to get inflation all the 379 00:22:13,520 --> 00:22:19,520 Speaker 1: way down without getting unemployment up, and they don't want 380 00:22:19,560 --> 00:22:25,600 Speaker 1: to acknowledge that, and that forces a certain confusion uh 381 00:22:25,640 --> 00:22:30,879 Speaker 1: into all of their UH statements. I can sympathize and 382 00:22:31,000 --> 00:22:37,080 Speaker 1: understand why they don't want to acknowledge that part of 383 00:22:37,080 --> 00:22:42,040 Speaker 1: the problem is they've taken on an excessive obligation UH 384 00:22:42,080 --> 00:22:46,560 Speaker 1: to UH communicate. So I think they're in a very 385 00:22:46,640 --> 00:22:50,760 Speaker 1: very difficult situation. I don't know to what extent they're 386 00:22:50,760 --> 00:22:54,000 Speaker 1: going to choose to take the pain that is ahead 387 00:22:54,600 --> 00:22:57,639 Speaker 1: on the stag side, and to what extent they're going 388 00:22:57,680 --> 00:23:02,120 Speaker 1: to choose to take it on inflation UH side. That 389 00:23:02,800 --> 00:23:07,679 Speaker 1: remains to be seen. I suspect in some ultimate sense 390 00:23:08,119 --> 00:23:12,880 Speaker 1: they don't really know either which way it's going to go. 391 00:23:13,880 --> 00:23:19,960 Speaker 1: It's got to worry them that UH financial conditions are 392 00:23:20,040 --> 00:23:25,200 Speaker 1: now materially looser than they were when the FED last met, 393 00:23:26,040 --> 00:23:30,080 Speaker 1: and when in the middle of a tightening cycle, financial 394 00:23:30,119 --> 00:23:35,840 Speaker 1: conditions are substantially loosening. That has to make a central 395 00:23:35,880 --> 00:23:40,399 Speaker 1: bank UH nervous. David, There's one other aspect of the 396 00:23:40,480 --> 00:23:45,879 Speaker 1: situation that I think is very important and underrecognized, and 397 00:23:45,960 --> 00:23:50,720 Speaker 1: that is because everybody focuses, and focuses rightly on the geopolitics, 398 00:23:50,800 --> 00:23:54,440 Speaker 1: what's happening with Russia and Ukraine, what's happening with droughts, 399 00:23:54,600 --> 00:23:59,000 Speaker 1: all of it. They don't really fully internalized that oil 400 00:23:59,040 --> 00:24:03,679 Speaker 1: prices and wheat prices have both come down substantially and 401 00:24:03,760 --> 00:24:07,480 Speaker 1: are predicted to come down substantially in the future. That's 402 00:24:07,520 --> 00:24:13,160 Speaker 1: what's driving the relatively limited inflation expectations. And those who 403 00:24:13,160 --> 00:24:17,800 Speaker 1: were quick to focus on concepts of core inflation when 404 00:24:18,200 --> 00:24:23,080 Speaker 1: headline inflation was higher than core inflation can't stop doing 405 00:24:23,119 --> 00:24:30,280 Speaker 1: that when headline inflation is lower than uh core inflation. 406 00:24:30,960 --> 00:24:34,159 Speaker 1: And I don't see that we're really making any great 407 00:24:34,200 --> 00:24:38,200 Speaker 1: progress with perspect to core inflation. One of the things 408 00:24:38,320 --> 00:24:42,560 Speaker 1: that Fed emphasized in the minutes, besides really being concerned 409 00:24:42,560 --> 00:24:45,119 Speaker 1: about inflation expectations, on the other side of that was 410 00:24:45,160 --> 00:24:48,160 Speaker 1: a softening housing market, something you referred to last week 411 00:24:48,200 --> 00:24:50,520 Speaker 1: on this program. Give us your take of the housing market. 412 00:24:50,560 --> 00:24:52,880 Speaker 1: Some people say we're in a housing recession right now. 413 00:24:53,359 --> 00:24:58,560 Speaker 1: So I think you have to distinguish um movers from 414 00:24:58,720 --> 00:25:03,840 Speaker 1: stayers sort of put it afferently. You have to look 415 00:25:03,880 --> 00:25:05,960 Speaker 1: at you have to think about what the right way 416 00:25:06,000 --> 00:25:10,760 Speaker 1: to look at rents is. Here's what's true. What's true 417 00:25:10,880 --> 00:25:15,680 Speaker 1: is that last year people who were signing new leases, 418 00:25:16,400 --> 00:25:21,360 Speaker 1: we're buying new homes. We're paying fifteen or more than 419 00:25:21,400 --> 00:25:27,000 Speaker 1: they had a year ago. Nothing like that fed into UH, 420 00:25:27,560 --> 00:25:32,960 Speaker 1: the consumer Price Index or the FEDS preferred measures pc 421 00:25:34,000 --> 00:25:40,000 Speaker 1: UH index. All that fed through was the small fraction 422 00:25:40,040 --> 00:25:44,600 Speaker 1: of people who saw their rents change and a constant 423 00:25:44,640 --> 00:25:48,960 Speaker 1: rent for everybody else. What that means is that down 424 00:25:49,000 --> 00:25:55,040 Speaker 1: the road, like now, you're seeing inflation, not because new 425 00:25:55,160 --> 00:25:57,880 Speaker 1: leases are going up so fast, although they still are 426 00:25:57,920 --> 00:26:01,359 Speaker 1: going up at a reasonable rate, but just because the 427 00:26:01,480 --> 00:26:07,720 Speaker 1: people whose leases are coming up are seeing substantial increases. 428 00:26:08,000 --> 00:26:13,280 Speaker 1: And so we're gonna see significant housing price inflation in 429 00:26:13,320 --> 00:26:18,439 Speaker 1: the measures of inflation that are used probably for another 430 00:26:18,520 --> 00:26:22,840 Speaker 1: six to nine months. That's a different thing than what 431 00:26:23,040 --> 00:26:26,960 Speaker 1: builders are responding to. Builders aren't responding to that. Builders 432 00:26:27,000 --> 00:26:30,880 Speaker 1: are responding to what they think the price of houses 433 00:26:30,920 --> 00:26:34,119 Speaker 1: will be a year from now, and that come down, 434 00:26:34,200 --> 00:26:40,960 Speaker 1: and so we're seeing a slowing in UH building. And 435 00:26:41,080 --> 00:26:46,840 Speaker 1: that's what happens when UH interest rates UH. When interest 436 00:26:46,960 --> 00:26:50,240 Speaker 1: rates go up, in some ways, it makes sense if 437 00:26:50,280 --> 00:26:53,840 Speaker 1: we're going to have a decline in economic activity, it's 438 00:26:53,880 --> 00:26:58,280 Speaker 1: better to have a decline in something where we've already 439 00:26:58,280 --> 00:27:01,159 Speaker 1: got a huge stock of it and it's only the 440 00:27:01,240 --> 00:27:06,760 Speaker 1: new flow that's being affected. Then in UH, the in 441 00:27:06,960 --> 00:27:11,639 Speaker 1: something that we need to consume on a continuous basis 442 00:27:12,280 --> 00:27:19,000 Speaker 1: and that doesn't have any duration to it. We're talking 443 00:27:19,000 --> 00:27:21,359 Speaker 1: about softness and slow We certainly saw that in numbers 444 00:27:21,359 --> 00:27:23,639 Speaker 1: coming out of China at the beginning of this week. 445 00:27:24,240 --> 00:27:26,920 Speaker 1: And I wonder what you make of the Chinese problems 446 00:27:26,960 --> 00:27:28,640 Speaker 1: as we know there are three or four then they're 447 00:27:28,640 --> 00:27:31,600 Speaker 1: interlocked there. But on the other hand, is it possible 448 00:27:31,600 --> 00:27:33,439 Speaker 1: that will give a little, at least a little relief 449 00:27:33,480 --> 00:27:38,320 Speaker 1: to the Fed here on slowing inflation? I probably will. UH. 450 00:27:38,880 --> 00:27:41,120 Speaker 1: It goes back to the issue we discussed a few 451 00:27:41,119 --> 00:27:47,520 Speaker 1: minutes ago, UH David about oil prices and UH grain prices. 452 00:27:47,640 --> 00:27:52,840 Speaker 1: The main impact of Chinese slowing is likely to be 453 00:27:53,520 --> 00:27:56,800 Speaker 1: on commodity prices, and there's a question as to how 454 00:27:56,880 --> 00:28:00,200 Speaker 1: much weight those should be given as we think about 455 00:28:00,000 --> 00:28:04,719 Speaker 1: our inflation rate UH in this country. But it probably 456 00:28:04,800 --> 00:28:09,800 Speaker 1: is a positive on inflation. I think the larger questions 457 00:28:09,960 --> 00:28:14,520 Speaker 1: involved how we see China in the future and how 458 00:28:14,640 --> 00:28:20,680 Speaker 1: China will be responding to these economic h difficulties. These, 459 00:28:20,720 --> 00:28:24,000 Speaker 1: as I've been saying now for some time, are looking 460 00:28:24,080 --> 00:28:29,359 Speaker 1: like increasingly profound events. UH. In China, it was taken 461 00:28:29,400 --> 00:28:33,760 Speaker 1: as almost axiomatic six months or a year ago that 462 00:28:33,920 --> 00:28:37,520 Speaker 1: at some point the Chinese economy would surpass the American 463 00:28:37,560 --> 00:28:42,200 Speaker 1: economy in terms of total GDP at market exchange rates. 464 00:28:42,240 --> 00:28:47,920 Speaker 1: That's now much less clear than it previously was. And 465 00:28:48,200 --> 00:28:52,959 Speaker 1: I think you're seeing all kinds of challenges for China. 466 00:28:53,120 --> 00:28:57,360 Speaker 1: There's the huge financial overhang, there's the where the growth 467 00:28:57,440 --> 00:29:02,440 Speaker 1: is going to come from. There's the growing Communist Party 468 00:29:02,480 --> 00:29:09,400 Speaker 1: involvement in a wider range of enterprises. There's the demographic challenge. 469 00:29:10,520 --> 00:29:14,680 Speaker 1: I have been saying for some time that I think 470 00:29:14,720 --> 00:29:16,640 Speaker 1: people are going to look back at some of the 471 00:29:16,680 --> 00:29:21,560 Speaker 1: economic forecasts about China in the same way they looked 472 00:29:21,560 --> 00:29:25,880 Speaker 1: back at economic forecasts for Russia that we're made in 473 00:29:25,960 --> 00:29:30,480 Speaker 1: nineteen sixty or for Japan that we're made in ninete. Okay, Larry, 474 00:29:30,520 --> 00:29:32,520 Speaker 1: thank you so very much, says Hilarry. Summers for Harvard 475 00:29:32,520 --> 00:29:35,680 Speaker 1: are very special and trainer here on Wall Street Week. Finally, 476 00:29:35,840 --> 00:29:39,400 Speaker 1: one more thought. Getting old. It's one thing that we 477 00:29:39,520 --> 00:29:41,760 Speaker 1: all have to do, and none of us wants to 478 00:29:41,800 --> 00:29:44,360 Speaker 1: think about it. And it sometimes seems like some of 479 00:29:44,400 --> 00:29:47,600 Speaker 1: the oldest among us may be the deepest in denial. 480 00:29:48,040 --> 00:29:51,720 Speaker 1: Where there's rock musicians like Mick Jagger still performing live 481 00:29:51,800 --> 00:29:53,880 Speaker 1: on stage at the age of seventy nine, or Sir 482 00:29:53,960 --> 00:29:57,200 Speaker 1: Paul McCartney, who's still going strong way past that age 483 00:29:57,240 --> 00:30:00,840 Speaker 1: of sixty four he wants worried about. Or are political 484 00:30:00,920 --> 00:30:04,880 Speaker 1: leaders in or nearing their eighties like President Biden and 485 00:30:04,920 --> 00:30:07,880 Speaker 1: Mitch McConnell and Nancy Pelosi who snapped back at a 486 00:30:07,920 --> 00:30:11,320 Speaker 1: reporter ten years ago when asked a question some of 487 00:30:11,360 --> 00:30:14,720 Speaker 1: your colonies finally say that you're just going to stay 488 00:30:14,800 --> 00:30:18,840 Speaker 1: on for the quality and having a younger leadership and 489 00:30:18,920 --> 00:30:28,360 Speaker 1: to be first and first the party belong persons, questions 490 00:30:29,040 --> 00:30:34,760 Speaker 1: Tonal and who can forget President Ronald Reagan, who in 491 00:30:35,720 --> 00:30:38,880 Speaker 1: provoked the age old or should I say old age 492 00:30:39,000 --> 00:30:43,040 Speaker 1: question after stumbling through his previous debate with Democratic challenger 493 00:30:43,080 --> 00:30:46,960 Speaker 1: Walter Mondale, only to come back with this zinger, I 494 00:30:47,000 --> 00:30:49,960 Speaker 1: will not make age an issue of this campaign. I 495 00:30:50,000 --> 00:30:55,200 Speaker 1: am not going to exploit for political purposes my opponent's 496 00:30:55,400 --> 00:31:00,880 Speaker 1: youth and inexperience. The world of business and finance isn't 497 00:31:01,040 --> 00:31:04,120 Speaker 1: entirely immune from this, led by Warren Buffett, who at 498 00:31:04,200 --> 00:31:07,480 Speaker 1: ninety one shows no signs of stepping down and told 499 00:31:07,480 --> 00:31:10,240 Speaker 1: our own David Rubinstein his goal is to keep going. 500 00:31:10,760 --> 00:31:12,920 Speaker 1: I'd like to be the oldest man that ever lived, actually, 501 00:31:14,080 --> 00:31:16,880 Speaker 1: and who knows, maybe we don't really just get older, 502 00:31:17,080 --> 00:31:19,360 Speaker 1: we get better. For those of us hoping that that 503 00:31:19,440 --> 00:31:22,240 Speaker 1: may just be true, we now have a concrete, provable 504 00:31:22,240 --> 00:31:25,480 Speaker 1: example coming from the world of golf, where a journeyman 505 00:31:25,480 --> 00:31:29,200 Speaker 1: tour professional who'd struggled for years suddenly became a star 506 00:31:29,720 --> 00:31:33,360 Speaker 1: simply by turning fifty, pushing him into the Older Player 507 00:31:33,440 --> 00:31:37,000 Speaker 1: p G a tour champions League. To be sure, Stephen 508 00:31:37,000 --> 00:31:39,040 Speaker 1: Alker from New Zealand happened to be at the very 509 00:31:39,080 --> 00:31:41,640 Speaker 1: top of his game when his birthday came around, but 510 00:31:41,880 --> 00:31:44,520 Speaker 1: according to The Wall Street Journal, adding that extra year 511 00:31:44,720 --> 00:31:46,840 Speaker 1: has led him to make in one year three point 512 00:31:46,880 --> 00:31:49,360 Speaker 1: five million dollars, which is more than he'd made in 513 00:31:49,480 --> 00:31:52,040 Speaker 1: all the rest of his career put together. And if 514 00:31:52,040 --> 00:31:54,440 Speaker 1: he keeps sinking extra long puts like he did to 515 00:31:54,520 --> 00:31:59,920 Speaker 1: win the Boeing Classic, he may just be getting started. 516 00:32:00,840 --> 00:32:02,600 Speaker 1: That does it For this episode of Wall Street Week, 517 00:32:02,640 --> 00:32:05,280 Speaker 1: I'm David Weston. This is Bloomberg. See you next week. 518 00:32:11,720 --> 00:32:11,760 Speaker 1: M