http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aS3Jyipn3hYo
By Tomoko Yamazaki and Bernard Lo
direct link to interview with on Bloomberg television:
http://www.bloomberg.com/avp/avp.asx...D=511273799&A=
By Tomoko Yamazaki and Bernard Lo
Oct. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Paolo Pellegrini, the former Paulson & Co. hedge-fund manager who helped make more than $3 billion with bets on a U.S. housing crash, said shorting long-term U.S. debt is the “only attractive bet” for investors.
“I always like to think about assets that are likely to experience a breakdown; the only thing I’m pretty comfortable with right now is U.S. Treasury securities and U.S. agency mortgage-backed securities,” he said in a telephone interview from Beijing today. “I think that those are overpriced so they are attractive shorts.”
Mortgage-backed securities issued by U.S. agencies including Washington-based Fannie Mae are also attractive shorts, he said.
[..]
Pellegrini disagrees with the U.S. Federal Reserve’s monetary policy, claiming it is cheating savers to pay for the aftermath of the financial crisis, adding that the devaluation of the dollar is a “particular concern” for investors like himself who hold dollar assets.
“The dollar has depreciated more than it should for the short term,” Pellegrini said in a Bloomberg Television interview in Beijing. “And if you ask me where am I putting my money now, I am on the sidelines.”
“I always like to think about assets that are likely to experience a breakdown; the only thing I’m pretty comfortable with right now is U.S. Treasury securities and U.S. agency mortgage-backed securities,” he said in a telephone interview from Beijing today. “I think that those are overpriced so they are attractive shorts.”
Mortgage-backed securities issued by U.S. agencies including Washington-based Fannie Mae are also attractive shorts, he said.
[..]
Pellegrini disagrees with the U.S. Federal Reserve’s monetary policy, claiming it is cheating savers to pay for the aftermath of the financial crisis, adding that the devaluation of the dollar is a “particular concern” for investors like himself who hold dollar assets.
“The dollar has depreciated more than it should for the short term,” Pellegrini said in a Bloomberg Television interview in Beijing. “And if you ask me where am I putting my money now, I am on the sidelines.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/avp/avp.asx...D=511273799&A=
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