Special Guest: Kristina Hooper, CFP, CAIA, CIMA, ChFC Managing Director,
US Investment Strategist, Head of US Capital Markets Research & Strategy.
Kristina Hooper is a managing director, US Investment Strategist and Head of
US Capital Markets Research & Strategy with Allianz Global Investors, which
she joined in 1998. She provides financial professionals and their clients
with updates on financial-market performance, market trends, economic trends
and financial-planning concepts. Ms. Hooper has appeared on CNBC and Reuters
TV and is regularly quoted in The Wall Street Journal, Investor's
Business Daily, Reuters and other financial-news publications. She
has 18 years of investment-industry experience and previously worked in product
management at UBS (formerly PaineWebber) and at MetLife. Ms. Hooper has a B.A., cum
laude, from Wellesley College; a J.D. from Pace University School of Law,
where she was a Trustees' Merit Scholar; and an M.B.A. in finance from New
York University's Leonard N. Stern School of Business, where she was a Teaching
Fellow in macroeconomics and organizational behavior. Ms. Hooper holds the
Certified Financial Planner, Chartered Alternative Investment Analyst, Certified
Investment Management Analyst and Chartered Financial Consultant designations.
She is a CFA Level II candidate.
Financial Repression
What is financial repression?
Government actions (lower interest rates, increased regulations, etc.)
to reduce debt while maintaining inflation
Goal: Create negative real (after-inflation) returns and inflate away
public debt by forcing real rates below GDP growth
Why does it matter to investors?
It's a "stealth tax" that systematically strips wealth; "safe" investments
no longer generate enough income
It rewards debtors and punishes savers -- especially retirees
Financial repression: It's happening now around the globe
A Financial Repression checklist:
- Extremely low key interest rates and bond yields
- Central bank purchases of government bonds
- Political pressure on banks to purchase government bonds
- Nationalization of select banks
- Repression-friendly regulatory measures
- Restrictions on foreign capital movements
- Pension asset transfers to governments