What to expect as the Fed gets ready to raise interest rates

In This Article:

Cumberland Advisors CIO David Kotok joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss the Fed's next moves, what rate hikes will do for the U.S. economy, and the outlook for the market.

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: All right, two things we are sure of. First, the Rock's arms looked really enormous at the start of last night's Super Bowl. And two, the Fed is getting ready to raise interest rates likely in March. Let's stay on rates, rather than the Rock's biceps. David Kotok is the co-founder and CIO of Cumberland Advisors and joins us now. David, always so nice to see you. How concerned are you that the Fed frontloads these interest rate hikes? And what impact do you think that will have on the economy this year?

DAVID KOTOK: I hope they don't frontload. The Jim Bullard warning, which created a lot of turmoil in the market is less likely, in my opinion, to happen. I believe the majority of the members of the Federal Open Market Committee know that moving policy should be like moving a battleship, not a speedboat. And so I don't expect frontloading.

My biggest concern, Brian, is the balance sheet shrinkage because the Fed has only done that once, and their record about it is poor. So I'm OK with four or five rate hikes, get the short-term interest rate up to 1%, let money markets start to clear, let people get away from the zero bound, let them earn something on savings. I think that would stabilize a lot of issues. It's the balance sheet shrinkage that is the unknown. And it's way out in the future, but it may come out as fast. I hope it doesn't.

JULIE HYMAN: Well, what's the risk that you're concerned about? Is it the speed of the shrinkage, how soon it's going to happen and what-- what are the sort of potential mistakes they could make when it comes to that shrinkage?

DAVID KOTOK: Well, there's the real cutting edge question, Julie, because nobody knows the shift in bond market duration as the Fed moves from taking balance sheet to neutral and then shrinking it. And this is interactive with the Treasury since the Treasury is still issuing Treasury debt, which I believe Janet Yellen, as treasurer of the United States or secretary of the Treasury, and Jay Powell, who worked together, are going to balance this so there's no instability in the financial system.

The Treasury may raise the amount of bills versus notes and bonds as the Fed changes its holdings. So this is an integrated task. There's only been one case study of trying to do that and raise an interest rate at the same time, and it failed. Was enough learned from it? We're going to find that out. Remember this, though. If the Federal Reserve throws the balance sheet today, there would be paydowns on the mortgage portfolio.