"Other than the interest rate hike, are there other catalysts increasing or decreasing the attractiveness of fixed income instruments in terms of, for instance, political risk, or some more global, macro stuff? Are there any other catalysts that you coming up soon?" Benzinga asked.
There are a couple of things at play here, Heppenstall responded. “I do think the volatility in all risk markets is certainly a theme that played out in '15 and will likely continue into 2016. And certainly, the fact that you have most other central banks across the globe in an easing process [...] tends to create volatility in the currency market. And, a lot of times, that can spill over into currency in the risk market.”
Investing Globally
Heppenstall was then questioned about areas of concern when investing globally (outside of Greece).
Although his firm tends to be more domestic-focused when it comes to its fixed income positioning, the expert did identify some “spots” worrying him.
“Some of the trouble in the emerging market world is also personal, the Fed tightening, which has put an upward pressure on the dollar, and a lot of those countries have a lot of debt denominated by the U.S. dollar, so that increases the burden on the debt side,” he said.
“Then, the market crisis, declining economic growth... a lot of them are dependent on some type of commodity revenue.”
“Certainly, I think in terms of what that means today, we need to be very deliberate with regards to the pace of increases, just not put additional pressure on a lot of countries that are already feeling the strain of a [...] rate hike in December,” he concluded.
Disclosure: Javier Hasse holds no positions in any of the securities mentioned above.
Image Credit: Public Domain© 2024 Benzinga.com. Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved.
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