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Home News Markets

RBA rate cut reflects ‘new neutral’: Pimco

The Reserve Bank of Australia was right to cut the cash rate to 1.75 per cent earlier this month, despite the criticism it has faced, says Pimco.

by Adrian Flores
May 18, 2016
in Markets, News
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Pimco head of portfolio management in Australia Robert Mead stated in a blog that, like the RBA, investors may find that facing up to reality leads to much better decisions.

“The reality is with the Australian policy rate now at 1.75 per cent, we have started a new chapter of the new neutral for Australia, and this has implications for Australian investors,” Mr Mead said.

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“Investors should position their portfolios in line with the fundamental economic backdrop today, the current valuation of assets and, very importantly, the policy settings that are most likely to occur – not what they think should occur.”

Pimco defines the new neutral as a world in which central banks will be constrained to set policy rates at levels well below those that prevailed in the global financial crisis.

Mr Mead said investors may benefit in a new neutral world by acknowledging that “expected returns will be lower and that chasing higher returns equals taking much higher risk”.

He further added that investors should consider investing in bonds in order to to generate relatively capital-stable real income.

“Australian portfolios in general are already underweight interest rate exposure, so staying true-to-label and benchmark-aware in a core bond portfolio should be a prerequisite,” he said.

Mr Mead also suggested that investors can diversify across asset classes to help reduce portfolio volatility.

“Portfolio diversification is becoming even more important in the low-return environment as there is less of a ‘cushion’ to absorb losses,” he said.

Read more:

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ANZ sheds 200 back-office roles

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