pwshub.com

BlackRock’s Fink says market is wrong on Fed rate-cut bets

(Bloomberg) — BlackRock Inc. (BLK) Chief Executive Officer Larry Fink said the market is pricing too many interest-rate cuts from the Federal Reserve given the US economy continues to grow.

Most Read from Bloomberg

“I don’t see any landing,” Fink told Bloomberg Television’s Francine Lacqua in an interview Tuesday on the sidelines of the Berlin Global Dialogue 2024 conference. “The amount of easing that’s in the forward curve is crazy. I do believe there’s room for easing more, but not as much as the forward curve would indicate.”

Money markets imply a one-in-three chance the Fed will deliver another half-point cut in November, and price a total of about 190 basis points of easing by the end of next year. But Fink said it’s hard for him to see that materializing, as most government policies at the moment are more inflationary than deflationary.

The Fed lowered borrowing costs by a half percentage point in September, the first reduction since 2020 and a larger-than-usual move. Since then, traders and analysts have been debating how policymakers will approach the size and pace of easing in coming months.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said on Monday the central bank will lower interest rates “over time” and emphasized that the overall US economy remains on solid footing. He also reiterated his confidence that inflation will continue moving toward the 2% target.

“There are segments of the economy that are struggling. There are segments of the economy that are doing really well,” said Fink. “We spend so much time focusing on the segments that are doing poorly.”

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink.

BlackRock CEO Larry Fink.

The CEO at BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, also said despite assets valuations and some geopolitical issues, the market isn’t facing any real systemic risk and sees corporate earnings continuing to do well.

“I would argue today that because of the expansion of the global capital markets, we’re diffusing more risk than ever,” he said. “There is actually less systemic risk today than ever before.”

Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Related stories
3 days ago - With BlackRock leading the Bitcoin charge, the cryptocurrency's best days likely remain ahead.
2 weeks ago - With Nvidia's incredible stock price performance over the past year, some billionaire investment managers are locking in their gains and using the...
1 month ago - In an interview with CoinDesk's Markets Daily, BitMEX co-founder and Maelstrom CIO Arthur Hayes discusses the impact of the Fed cut, how he sees the crypto markets shaping out this year, and why he's investing in Bitcoin Ordinals and...
1 month ago - In addition to their upside potential, Bitcoin and Ethereum can help you diversify.
1 month ago - A new multi-trillion-dollar market opportunity could send the value of Chainlink soaring.
Other stories
18 minutes ago - Orders for TI's chips from the automotive market have faltered as customers struggle to clear existing inventory amid a years-long slump in demand stemming from stock-piling during the pandemic. An ongoing weakness in the industrial...
19 minutes ago - Nuclear energy-related stocks have taken off following major announcements from Alphabet, Inc.'s (NASDAQ:GOOG) (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Google and Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ:AMZN) as the tech industry turns to nuclear energy to power AI data centers....
55 minutes ago - Freeform Future Corp., a startup developing 3D printers for producing metal parts, today announced that it raised $14 million in funding. The capital came from Nvidia Corp.’s NVentures fund and Boeing Co.’s AE Ventures. Besides providing...
55 minutes ago - In a move to address the growing challenge of measuring artificial intelligence investments, Grammarly Inc. has announced new return-on-investment measurement tools designed to help enterprises quantify the impact of AI-powered...
1 hour ago - Trump Media & Technology Group stock hit its highest level since July, adding to its recent rally.