Loomis Sayles’ investment industry veteran David Rolley distils 40-plus years of investment wisdom to explain how we got to where we are, why the optimism around AI puts us in a particularly perilous position, and what it all means for fixed income investors.
There has been no shortage of defining moments over the past 25 years. As a seasoned investor, what stands out most from an investment perspective?
David Rolley (DR): I’d actually highlight two market turning points, twenty years apart. The first is the US dollar bear market and inflation peak of 1980, even though many now in markets weren’t even born then.
Back at the end of the 1960s and into the 1970s, we saw the breakdown of what was thought a stable international order – the collapse of the Bretton Woods system. The US failed to raise taxes to pay for the Vietnam War, leading to persistent inflation. Our partners abroad wouldn’t import that inflation, so the dollar peg was abandoned, and the US experienced a nine-year bear market for the dollar and accelerating inflation, which peaked at 13% by 1980.
Paul Volcker’s ‘whatever it takes’ monetary regime led to 20% short US Treasury rates and double-digit long bond yields. This brought about dollar dominance, spectacular bull markets in US fixed income and equities, and a lasting lesson: policy changes – when big enough – reset asset classes and investment paradigms.
Which brings us to the second turning point, which was circa 2000. But it was not the dotcom bust. It was China’s global emergence. Because, suddenly, China wasn’t a marginal footnote: it became the biggest single force moving international markets. As portfolio managers at Loomis Sayles, we shaped portfolios not to lend directly to China – as that carried opaque risks – but to the countries and companies supplying everything China would need: iron ore, copper, oil.
The result was performance awards and a global business built around the idea that Chinese demand would revolutionise commodity markets. Recognising those paradigm shifts, and positioning for the second- and third-order effects, has been the story of my career.
How did those moments change how you thought about market risk, or how you tackled portfolio construction?
DR: After Bretton Woods, many ‘dollar bears’ failed to adapt and missed out on the rally when US capital markets reasserted themselves. The lesson: don’t anchor to old regimes. Capital flows became more important than trade flows and US markets outperformed for years.
The China story, meanwhile, was high conviction and contrarian in two ways. First, after the Asian debt crisis, most investors abandoned emerging markets – especially in Asia. Second, our decision to avoid lending to China itself and instead focus on hard-currency bonds from suppliers like Brazil, Peru, and Korea was rewarded twice over: risk premiums were high, and the demand picture was unmistakable.
Key, though, was differentiating ‘market risk’ from ‘actual risk’. For instance, I recall one particular iron mining company in Brazil that could borrow at 10-12% dollar rates for ten years – an incredible premium given its mines’ 200-year reserve lives as collateral. If you looked past market fear and did your research, real risk could be much less than perceived.
Was it especially controversial among your colleagues to take a contrarian view on China at that time?
DR: It was a transition period. The portfolio manager who hired me and my colleague Ken Buntrock retired in the summer of 2000, so we benefited from what you might call ‘benign neglect’. Basically, we had the latitude to pursue what our fundamental analysis told us were favourable risk-reward prospects.
Global fixed income was also a small product. In that regard, being nimble, with a close-knit team, helped us act. If we’d been a larger team with less independence, consensus might have driven us away from what proved to be a big win. Risk premiums were high post-Asia and Russia’s default – remember, Russia was pumping nine million barrels of oil of a day and they defaulted on most of their debt.
So, there were casualties all around and the risk premium was there for a reason. Taking risk in South Korea, then trading at spread parity with Argentina, was considered brave. But again, you got paid far above fair value if you did your analysis.
That feels like a different world now. How do you explain these periods to younger colleagues, maybe those who’ve started their investing journey after Covid, and so have never actually experienced what markets were like in the 2000s?
DR: My main advice is to diversify your sources of information. Don’t just live on Bloomberg screens. If you’re a country specialist, consume local media. Broaden your perspective – cross-sectionally across markets and regions, and across time, by reading history. You’re looking for patterns. Pattern recognition matters: studying not just financial but also economic and even military history helps you spot similarities with today’s events.