06-04-2014, 10:50 AM
Global outlook fine but not great, says Fink
Tony Boyd
636 words
1 Apr 2014
The Australian Financial Review
AFNR
English
Copyright 2014. Fairfax Media Management Pty Limited.
Larry Fink, chief executive of the world's biggest investor BlackRock, with $US4.3 trillion ($4.6 trillion) in assets under management, is bullish about the United States economy and its sharemarket but forecasts a looming slowdown in China.
In an exclusive interview with The Australian Financial Review, Mr Fink covered a wide range of topics including bank regulation, shadow banking in China, Australia's impressive savings pool, the new Federal Reserve Board chairman Janet Yellen, emerging markets and high frequency trading.
He forecast the US sharemarket would keeping rising this year but said investors would have to get used to increased volatility in global financial markets.
"The world's fine but it's not great," he said.
"The US central bank is tapering – you have some central banks tightening right now to defend their currencies and you have some central banks such as Japan, which is continuing to do a very aggressive stimulus.
"You will continue to have a very liberal European Central Bank because Europe is not doing as well as it should.
"So because of the lack of co-ordinated central bank behaviour you are going to see some parts of the world doing better than others."
Mr Fink said we may look back on the past five years as "the best five years we will see in a long time in terms of the opportunities we had in investing."
He predicted the US market would rise this year by about 8 per cent.
"It is not going to be as easy to make money but it is going to be a positive equity market overall," he said.
Mr Fink, who is in Australia to meet staff and clients in Sydney and Melbourne, warned Australia not to fall into the trap of implementing an aggressive austerity program.
"I would argue that if there is a need for a little more fiscal stimulus for the economy I would be a little more open towards that," he said.
"I am not much worried about Australia because you have such vast savings you are able to self-finance."Cautious on China
However, he was cautious about the prospects for China, Australia's biggest export market.
"Government policies are going to be the difference between a great global world and a poor global world, and probably at the forefront of it is China," he said.
"Last November, the Chinese announced their new 10-year reforms. The first and foremost reform is going from a policy-oriented economy to a market-oriented economy. That's hard.
"We believe the Chinese government will get it right. But we also believe that maybe China will slow even more than people think because the policies they are trying to assert are difficult, and they are going to take time to implement.
"We wouldn't be surprised to see the economy slow from 7.7 per cent to 7 per cent. The world will look at that as a negative. I don't look at that as a negative."Aggressive US tapering urged
Mr Fink urged Federal Reserve Board chairman Janet Yellen to taper the US bond-buying program as aggressively as possible, despite the complaints from some emerging markets. "Last year the US deficit was $750 billion and the Federal Reserve was buying $1 trillion, so they were buying more than was issued, creating a bubble.
"This year if they don't aggressively taper, the US deficit is estimated to be $540 billion. So they have to be very aggressive in getting out the market."
Mr Fink said the turnaround at BlackRock Australia under local chief executive Justin Arter was necessary to reconnect with customers who had not been well served following several mergers a few years ago.
Fairfax Media Management Pty Limited
Document AFNR000020140331ea4100033
Tony Boyd
636 words
1 Apr 2014
The Australian Financial Review
AFNR
English
Copyright 2014. Fairfax Media Management Pty Limited.
Larry Fink, chief executive of the world's biggest investor BlackRock, with $US4.3 trillion ($4.6 trillion) in assets under management, is bullish about the United States economy and its sharemarket but forecasts a looming slowdown in China.
In an exclusive interview with The Australian Financial Review, Mr Fink covered a wide range of topics including bank regulation, shadow banking in China, Australia's impressive savings pool, the new Federal Reserve Board chairman Janet Yellen, emerging markets and high frequency trading.
He forecast the US sharemarket would keeping rising this year but said investors would have to get used to increased volatility in global financial markets.
"The world's fine but it's not great," he said.
"The US central bank is tapering – you have some central banks tightening right now to defend their currencies and you have some central banks such as Japan, which is continuing to do a very aggressive stimulus.
"You will continue to have a very liberal European Central Bank because Europe is not doing as well as it should.
"So because of the lack of co-ordinated central bank behaviour you are going to see some parts of the world doing better than others."
Mr Fink said we may look back on the past five years as "the best five years we will see in a long time in terms of the opportunities we had in investing."
He predicted the US market would rise this year by about 8 per cent.
"It is not going to be as easy to make money but it is going to be a positive equity market overall," he said.
Mr Fink, who is in Australia to meet staff and clients in Sydney and Melbourne, warned Australia not to fall into the trap of implementing an aggressive austerity program.
"I would argue that if there is a need for a little more fiscal stimulus for the economy I would be a little more open towards that," he said.
"I am not much worried about Australia because you have such vast savings you are able to self-finance."Cautious on China
However, he was cautious about the prospects for China, Australia's biggest export market.
"Government policies are going to be the difference between a great global world and a poor global world, and probably at the forefront of it is China," he said.
"Last November, the Chinese announced their new 10-year reforms. The first and foremost reform is going from a policy-oriented economy to a market-oriented economy. That's hard.
"We believe the Chinese government will get it right. But we also believe that maybe China will slow even more than people think because the policies they are trying to assert are difficult, and they are going to take time to implement.
"We wouldn't be surprised to see the economy slow from 7.7 per cent to 7 per cent. The world will look at that as a negative. I don't look at that as a negative."Aggressive US tapering urged
Mr Fink urged Federal Reserve Board chairman Janet Yellen to taper the US bond-buying program as aggressively as possible, despite the complaints from some emerging markets. "Last year the US deficit was $750 billion and the Federal Reserve was buying $1 trillion, so they were buying more than was issued, creating a bubble.
"This year if they don't aggressively taper, the US deficit is estimated to be $540 billion. So they have to be very aggressive in getting out the market."
Mr Fink said the turnaround at BlackRock Australia under local chief executive Justin Arter was necessary to reconnect with customers who had not been well served following several mergers a few years ago.
Fairfax Media Management Pty Limited
Document AFNR000020140331ea4100033