Bridgewater’s investment chief: Return to ’70s-style inflation unlikely

The lead investor in the world”™s largest hedge fund is forecasting the new bump-up inflation will not turn into a new normal.

Bridgewater
Prince

The consumer price index spiked last month in a 5% year-over-year increase, its highest uptick in 13 years. In an interview with the Financial Times, Bob Prince, the co-chief investment officer at Westport”™s Bridgewater Associates, echoed the sentiments of Federal Reserve officials who said the recent rise in inflation is transitory and will not lead to the “Great Inflation” environment that marred the 1970s economy.

While admitting “you are going to get some inflation,” Prince said it would be “moderate” and would recede as deflationary forces drive down recent price increases.

“There”™s not nearly as much potential for a big inflation cycle from private sector credit and spending,” he said. “The government is having to push pretty darn hard with fiscal stimulation to get things going and in addition when you look at inflation, low inflation is a global phenomenon. It”™s not a U.S. phenomenon.”

Prince said that history would not repeat itself, noting the fiscal policies of a half-century ago are not being repeated today.

“If you go back to the 1970s,”‰you didn”™t have the printing of money back then but you had credit growth,” he continued. “You had very strong collective bargaining (and) labor unions. “You had deregulation of the commodities markets,”‰so you had a spike in commodities, spike in oil prices. You had a lot of things there that don”™t exist today.”

Prince observed that despite the recent price increases, there was “a lot of latent spending still built up in the system” that is showing no signs of abating. But he warned that sustained wage gains by the workforce could precede a “self-reinforcing cycle” of inflation that would become difficult to contain.

“We haven”™t crossed that point yet,” he said. “It”™s still a reasonable possibility.”