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Oaktree Capital Management says Fed cuts to take US rates no lower than 3%

Bloomberg
Bloomberg • 2 min read
Oaktree Capital Management says Fed cuts to take US rates no lower than 3%
The Fed had been required to lift rates due to the “emergency” over inflation in recent years. “The emergency, I think, is over,” says Howard Marks. Photo: Bloomberg
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US interest rates will settle in a range of between 3% and 4% after reductions by the US Federal Reserve, according to Oaktree Capital Management LP’s Howard Marks.

“The Fed will back off from the emergency rate of five and a quarter, five and a half and get down into the threes,” Marks, the co-chairman and co-founder of Oaktree said at a conference in Melbourne on Thursday. “But my point to you, my belief is that we’re going to stay there in the threes and we’re not going back to zero or a half or one.”

The Fed is widely expected to kick off its easing cycle this month. Still, there remains a large degree of disagreement about the pace of reductions. Some rates traders expect policymakers to act more aggressively with a 50 basis point cut, while others anticipate a quarter-point decrease when Fed officials meet Sept 17-18 in Washington. 

Marks said the Fed had been required to lift rates due to the “emergency” over inflation in recent years. “The emergency, I think, is over,” he said.

Oaktree oversaw US$193 billion ($251.42 billion) as of June 30 across credit, private equity, real estate and listed equities strategies, according to its website.

“Economic growth may be slower, the profit margins may erode,” he said. “In other words, I think we’re going back to normal, but normal is different from what we saw over the last 40 years. That’s the result. And normal in the economic and investment world consists of a mix of good times and bad.”

See also: US CPI rises more than forecast, stalling inflation progress

On China, Marks said he believed the country would not isolate itself globally. He said to achieve 5% growth, they “need the rest of the world to do it”.

“I think they’re not going to go rogue and desert the rest of the world,” he said.

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