Louis-Vincent
Gave, CEO of Gavekal, is a go-to source for institutional investors
trying to interpret global macro risks such as the financial
implications of China’s rise. Gave, 46, was born in Paris, educated at
Duke University, and based in Hong Kong before the pandemic. Gavekal
provides independent research and manages $1.7 billion in Asian
fixed-income and equities strategies, primarily for European
institutions.
Louis-Vincent Gave: If I ask what the most important
development was in 2001, most people would say it was 9/11. With the
benefit of hindsight, it was China joining the World Trade Organization,
which changed the world for the following 20 years. If I ask about
2007, you’d say it was the start of the subprime crisis. With the
benefit of hindsight, it was the launch of the smartphone.
With hindsight, what will people say about 2020?
So
far, the Covid response in the U.S. has been a $12,800 increase in debt
per capita; in the United Kingdom, it’s $7,000, and in Germany and
France, $5,300. In China, it’s $1,200. The Western world responded with
massive increases in budget deficits, which could constrain future
policy options, while Asia, especially China, hasn’t.
Western
policy makers have no choice but to embrace yield-curve controls; they
can’t let interest rates go back up. You had Japan and Europe in the
yield-curve control gang. The big change now is that the U.S. has joined
them. Once the European Central Bank went down this [path], the euro
tanked. Once we are on the other side of Covid-19 and it becomes clear
the U.S. has no other choice, the dollar will collapse.
What will be the best investment opportunity post-Covid?
Investing
in Asian fixed-income markets, in local currencies. Governments there
have broadly been more efficient at dealing with Covid-19. Central-bank
balance sheets and government spending haven’t grown out of control.
Just as water flows downhill, capital is attracted to positive real
[inflation adjusted] rates. Today, these are mostly found in Asia.
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