Nothing Is Priced In | Bob Elliott on Why Investors Are Misreading the Oil Shock

March 25
58 mins

Episode Description

This episode of Excess Returns features Bob Elliott discussing the growing fragility in the global economy as an oil shock collides with a shift from an income-driven to a savings-driven system.

The conversation explores why markets may be mispricing the economic impact of higher oil prices, how inflation and growth dynamics could unfold, and what this means for investors navigating an increasingly volatile macro environment.

Bob also breaks down how to think about global macro investing today, including why traditional portfolios may be poorly positioned for a wider range of outcomes, how macro managers are adapting to shifting conditions, and how AI-driven productivity gains could impact economic growth, labor, and markets.

Bob Elliott on Twitter
https://twitter.com/BobEUnlimited

Unlimited Funds website
https://www.unlimitedfunds.com

Topics covered

  • The shift from an income-driven economy to a savings-driven economy and why it creates fragility

  • Why an oil shock acts as both an inflation driver and a tax on real consumer spending

  • How higher gas prices mechanically reduce discretionary spending and economic growth

  • Why markets may be underpricing the economic impact of the current oil shock

  • The link between oil prices, inflation expectations, and real demand destruction

  • How global markets respond to shocks through deleveraging and volatility spikes

  • Why gold and other winning trades can fall during risk-off environments

  • The sequencing of inflation first and growth slowdown later in shock-driven cycles

  • How central banks are likely to respond to a stagflationary shock

  • Lessons from 2022 and 2008 for understanding today’s macro environment

  • Why stocks and bonds may both be mispriced in the current regime

  • The difference between consumer surplus and true productivity gains from AI

  • Why AI-driven job losses and economic growth cannot coexist without major dissaving

  • The most likely path for AI as a productivity enhancer rather than a job destroyer

  • How to think about measuring productivity in a technology-driven economy

  • The role of second- and third-order effects in macro investing

  • How global macro strategies identify mispricings across asset classes

  • The concept of using the “wisdom of the crowd” from hedge fund positioning

  • Why macro strategies can perform in both rising and falling markets

  • How macro fits into a portfolio as a diversifier versus long-only assets

  • Why the future investment environment may require broader strategy diversification

Timestamps

00:00 Oil shock meets a savings-driven economy
01:00 Framing the macro environment: oil, inflation, and growth
02:12 What a savings-driven economy means for market fragility
04:46 Why household income vs spending divergence matters
07:00 First principles of an oil shock and demand inelasticity
08:00 How oil price spikes flow through to inflation
13:00 Global market reactions and emerging market dynamics
14:00 Deleveraging and volatility driving asset price reversals
15:44 Why gold declines during macro stress events
17:17 Institutional positioning and ETF flows in gold
17:34 Inflation first, growth slowdown later: sequencing the impact
19:24 Is the economic damage already done
22:00 How macro investors operate in low-conviction environments
29:19 What the Fed should do versus what it will do
31:00 Comparing today’s environment to 2022 inflation dynamics
33:00 Why markets are pricing in almost nothing
34:00 AI and the link between labor, income, and spending
37:11 Productivity vs consumer surplus in AI adoption
40:00 Why better tools don’t necessarily mean higher productivity
s
46:00 How global macro strategies are constructed
48:00 Using hedge fund positioning as a signal
56:00 Why the opportunity set for macro may be expanding

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