Biden’s focus: Climate, China and Jobs

PGIM’s chief economist and head of global macroeconomic research, Nathan Sheets, outlines what Biden’s priorities will be and how his key appointees will lead their departments. He also explains why he believes inflation will remain low and that investors will increasingly move into risk assets.

Expect the Biden government to invest strategically in infrastructure, healthcare and efforts to combat climate change, said Nathan Sheets, the former Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs representing the US government on international economic policy, and now chief economist at PGIM Fixed Income.

Speaking to FIS delegates, Sheets said Biden’s new appointees have years of experience and are not a team of rivals, but cautioned that a sleek administration will face headwinds getting ambitious spending plans through Congress.

One of the most experienced of Biden’s appointees is treasury secretary ex-Federal Reserve chair Janet Yellen.

Sheets said her principled independence will ensure she “leaves the Fed to pursue its policies” and said her overwhelming focus will be on steering the economy back to health after the pandemic. Here her particular focus will be on the labour market.

“The issue of getting people back to work is critical for the administration, and her experience is so useful. No-one knows the US labour market as well as she does,” he said, telling delegates to expect fresh ideas and approaches that will put the US in a strong position as the recovery takes hold.

Sponsored Content

 

Next he mentioned Brian Deese, former head of sustainability at Blackrock, tapped by Biden to lead the National Economic Council where he will lead the battle to counter climate change. He predicted that Deese’s “deliberate and smooth” style would be behind the scenes, rather than front of house talking to the press on policy.

Again, he flagged the challenges of getting climate policies through Congress and suggested the focus will be on executive orders and an administrative focus, alongside emphasising policies that focus on fuel efficiency.

As for Biden’s China policy, Sheets said Biden will also view China as a strategic competitor but the new administration’s methods of dealing with China will differ from Trump.

“US China policy will stay strategically tough, but the tactics will be different,” he said. While Trump’s focus was unilateral and focused on trade, Biden will work on a multilateral basis seeking allies and alliances in a negotiation process that will span opening up the Chinese economy and respecting foreign technology.

“Many of America’s concerns are shared in Japan, Australia and Europe,” he said. “Expect a tactically different approach, but there will be tensions in the US/ China relationship under Biden.”

Describing himself as in the “low inflation camp,” Sheets downplayed the likelihood of inflation spiking in the wake of the pandemic.

Drawing on his knowledge of low inflation after the GFC, a time when many people thought it would surge given the liquidity in the system, he said the same could be the case this time around. Back then structural forces in the economy like an aging demographic and automation kept inflation low, and these structural forces are still in play today.

“Automation is progressing and more so coming out of the pandemic, while high levels of debt are likely to impact demand,” he said, forecasting soft to moderate growth, low inflation and low rates in the years ahead. “It is possible during the process of getting back to normal that we see shortages and bottlenecks of higher inflation, but it will be a temporary phenomena.”

Reflecting on the impact of low rates and low inflation on asset classes, Sheets said investors would increasingly “reach for yield” in a trend that is positive for risk assets.

“Investors need to take on risk to to hit their expected return objectives,” he said, predicting investors will increasingly move into high quality stocks and out of government securities. Navigating currency risk will remain tough he said, predicting the dollar will depreciate not against the yen or Euro but against the renminbi and emerging market currencies as the global recovery takes hold.

“Currencies will be toughest asset class,” he concluded.

Leave a Comment

Sampension: Why there are many reasons to be optimistic

Sampension: Why there are many reasons to be optimistic

Now is not the time to reduce risk, argues Henrik Olejasz Larsen, chief investment officer of Sampension, Denmark’s $50 billion pension fund for public and private sector employees. In an interview with Top1000funds.com, he says corporate profits have not deteriorated, and although the market has been tested from multiple directions, the underlying optimism driving equities is strong enough to overrule the negative impact of geopolitical risk.

Sort content by

Mental health issues in focus at Denmark’s Velliv

Denmark’s Velliv Association, the governance entity behind member-owned commercial pension fund Velliv, explained why a society where workers' mental health needs are looked after is better for pension funds and their liabilities. 

Institutional investors pressure Elon Musk to get back to work

In a ratcheting up of investor pressure, Tesla shareholders including prominent European and US pension funds have this week demanded that Elon Musk dedicate at least 40 hours a week to managing the EV company. They also called on it to address “deficiencies in the board’s oversight of company leadership".

Alpha alone does not pay pensions – total returns do

Pension fund members in retirement want the sustainability of pension payments. OPTrust chief investment officer James Davis told the Top1000Funds Fiduciary Investors Symposium that a total portfolio approach is the best way to do that, and has been on a journey towards delivering it for the past 10 years.

Long-term investors can help break VC’s short-term trap

The short-term investment focus of venture capital investors and the withdrawal of government funding are opening the door to asset owners as providers of patient, long-term capital to fill an investment void, the Top1000funds.com Fiduciary Investors Symposium has heard.

TPA is in the eye of the beholder

Total portfolio approach is not a method, it’s a mindset, according to University of Toronto finance Professor Redouane Elkamhi. Also a senior advisor to HOOPP, Elkamhi said he would summarise TPA in one sentence: "How to be prepared for different market conditions."

Federal threats undermine Massachusetts’ edge, warns state treasurer

Massachusetts treasurer Deborah Goldberg warned that the state’s key strengths – including its higher education institutions and progressive social policies – are being targeted by the federal administration. She urged support from investors as federal funding for innovations and research wanes.

Previous