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Don’t expect low rates to return, Oaktree’s Marks says – instead, bet on debt

Repeating his warning that markets are undergoing a "sea change" that will see a new set of winners and losers emerge in short order, the famed distressed-debt investor said it's time to consider a profound shift from asset ownership to lending and credit.
Asset allocation

The 2,000-basis-point decline in interest rates over the past 40 years was the most important financial development of our time, according to Oaktree Capital’s Howard Marks, who believes we are witnessing the definitive end of the easy-money era – and that investors may not be fully prepared for the profound shift in capital it will require.

In a newly published memo, the famed distressed-debt investor doubled down on his December 2022 prediction that markets are undergoing a “sea change” of profound importance, as markets are forced to correct following decades of unnaturally accommodative monetary policy.

The changes Marks identified in his original Sea Change memo are not “just usual cyclical fluctuations”, he says in the new missive. “Rather, taken together, they represent a sweeping alteration of the investment environment, calling for significant capital reallocation.”

  • In the December memo, Marks explained that the Federal Reserve’s response to the global financial crisis unfolding in late 2008 was to take the Federal Funds rate to near-zero for the first time ever, followed by an overly long period of suppressed rates that “made asset owners complacent and potential buyers eager”.

    Now, inflation challenges driven in large part by COVID-19 relief and supply chain troubles have prompted central banks to lift rates, and Marks predicts they are highly unlikely to return to those artificially low levels anytime soon. That means “tougher times for corporate profits, for asset appreciation, for borrowing and for avoiding default”.

    “Bottom line: if this really is a sea change – meaning the investment environment has been fundamentally altered – you shouldn’t assume the investment strategies that have served you best since 2009 will do so in the years ahead.”

    Uncharted territory

    The vast majority of investors today have only ever experienced an environment of declining or ultra-low interest rates, which has been the norm since 1980 and in particular in the 13-year period from 2009 through 2021. That stretch saw “two rescues from financial crises, a generally favourable macro environment, aggressively accommodative central bank policies, a lack of inflation worries… and generally uninterrupted investment gains”, Marks said.

    These were “unusually easy times” – and, like it or not, they are over now.

    “There clearly isn’t much room for interest rate declines from today’s levels, and I don’t think short-term interest rates will be as low in the coming years as in the recent past,” Marks wrote. In other words, the years ahead won’t be easy, and that’s not a temporary thing: this is just the beginning of a fundamental economic and market transition.

    If Marks is right, the consequences of a “higher for longer” future will most likely include slower economic growth, eroded profit margins, higher default rates and less reliable asset appreciation. The cost of borrowing will stay higher, and businesses may have trouble obtaining financing.

    In short, “something closer to normalcy is likely to set in” – and, crucially, the “starkly different environment will produce a dramatically altered list of winners”, he said.

    Make room for credit

    Marks predicts equities, property and other forms of asset ownership, after years of benefitting from low rates, will be challenged in the new environment, as will investment strategies that rely on leverage. “It’s very notable that almost the entire history of levered investment strategies has been written” in the low-interest-rate period, and a rude awakening may be coming.

    Meanwhile, declining interest rates made lending and debt less rewarding and created difficult conditions for bargain hunters, who benefit from the desperation of panicked sellers.

    “Investors who profited in this period from asset ownership and levered investment strategies may overlook the salutary effect of interest rates on asset values and borrowing costs and instead think the profits stemmed from the inherent merit of their strategies, perhaps with some help from their own skill and wisdom. That is, they may have violated a basic rule in investing: ‘Never confuse brains and a bull market.’”

    The winners in the new regime, on the other hand, are likely to be the ones that suffered particularly in the 13 years to 2022: lending, credit and fixed-income investing. Marks pointed to high-yield bonds, which today are yielding more than 8 per cent – they yielded in the 4 per cent range as recently as early 2022 – and said the full spectrum of non-investment grade credit has similar potential to contribute to portfolio results, with yields on par with historical equity returns.

    “If the developments I describe really constitute a sea change as I believe – fundamental, significant, and potentially long-lasting – credit instruments should probably represent a substantial portion of portfolios; perhaps the majority.”




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