1BasisPoint

Krish and Rehan

The global macro podcast. Long-form, unscripted conversations with the fund managers navigating rates, FX, commodities, emerging markets, and geopolitics across borders. Hosted by Krish Lohia and Rehan Ganapathy

Episodes

  1. MAY 10

    The Fed Creates the Crises It Rescues Us From | James Athey, Fixed Income Fund Manager

    "If I could be reincarnated, I would want to come back as the bond market — because you can intimidate everybody." I sat down with James Athey, Fixed Income Fund Manager at Marlborough Group. 90 minutes, no filter, no consensus views. We covered: → Why central banks are structurally set up to always be behind the curve and why more data will never fix it → The Fed as arsonist and fireman: how the institution creates the very crises it then rescues us from → The basis trade: the trillion-dollar vulnerability hiding in plain sight in US Treasury markets → Why recessions are not the enemy, they are the medicine a broken system refuses to take → The real case for gold and it has nothing to do with inflation → Hard currency vs local currency EM debt and why treating them as the same thing is a costly mistake → How to think about emerging market debt in a world of rising yields and geopolitical fracture James Athey has been navigating fixed income markets for over two decades — through the GFC, the zero rate era, and the inflation shock of 2021. ⏱️ TIMESTAMPS 0:01 — Introduction: James's 20+ year journey into fixed income and macro thinking 0:09 — Why bonds over equities? The intellectual case for macro over bottom-up 1:29 — Is bottom-up stock picking still relevant in a world dominated by passive and systematic investors? 5:57 — Why does the stock market only seem to go up regardless of the news? 6:10 — Momentum, retail behaviour, and the self-fulfilling bull market 9:08 — How sustainable is the current bull run? 12:50 — Benchmark-constrained vs unconstrained funds: how the mandate changes the way you think about risk 16:52 — Could we ever return to pre-pandemic yield levels? 21:23 — US foreign policy instability and its real impact on treasury yields 26:30 — The yield curve is steepening while the Fed holds rates. What is the bond market telling us? 33:02 — Why James thinks central bank policy frameworks are fundamentally broken 49:32 — How the Fed could go from not buying treasuries to buying in size overnight 56:14 — Is any of this actually sustainable? 1:01:51 — The recession fixed income playbook: which sovereign bond markets to own and which to avoid 1:19:45 — One piece of advice for anyone trying to understand macro and bond markets from scratch 📌 ABOUT 1BASISPOINT 1BasisPoint brings you direct access to the fund managers, investors, and capital allocators who don't usually talk publicly. No recycled headlines, no hot takes — just honest, research-backed conversations about how the best in the business actually think. Hosted by Krish & Rehan. 🔗 FOLLOW & LISTEN Website: https://www.1bps.us Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0DoEJuX01OmoxLOBHJXTYr?si=1d244d2e4629480f Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/1basispoint/id1893808224 Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. The views expressed by the hosts and guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Marlborough Group or any of its officials. Nothing in this podcast should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any security or fund. Listeners should consult with a qualified professional for specific advice tailored to their individual circumstances. We are not responsible for any losses or liabilities incurred by acting on information from this podcast.

    1h 19m
  2. APR 16

    Mispricing Across Emerging Markets: Micro Themes vs Macro Reality

    In conversation with Jim Hayes of Lucerna Capital, we talk about Emerging Markets, Macro Trends and some of the most compelling investment opportunities right now. TL;DR Emerging markets are entering a new multi-year upcycle after a decade of underperformance driven by a strong USD, weak commodities, and capital outflowsMacro tailwinds are turning: weaker USD, rising commodities, and global fiscal expansion are improving growth and liquidity conditionsEM remains cheap, under-owned, and low expectation, creating asymmetric upside if the cycle continuesThe opportunity is more diversified than past cycles, with less reliance on China and broader drivers across regionsKey regional themes: India (private banks as compounding financial plays), Latin America (~50% overweight on valuation + political shift), and Africa (early-stage infrastructure/telecom growth)Main risk is global liquidity tightening, especially rising US bond yields and fiscal deficits, which could trigger volatility or recession but potentially reset the cycleStructural positioning avoids China (structural/regulatory risks) and crowded AI/semiconductor trades in favour of under-owned, mispriced assets.Core strategy is bottom-up stock picking with macro + country risk overlay, focusing on risk-reward, catalysts, and disciplined position sizing across two strategies (long-only + low-net long/short) The discussion provided a comprehensive strategic view of emerging markets, emphasizing their entrance into a long up-cycle fuelled by macroeconomic shifts and valuation opportunities. The core thesis is that emerging markets are entering the early stages of a multi-year upcycle after more than a decade of underperformance. From roughly 2010 onwards, the asset class was held back by a combination of a strong US dollar, weak commodity prices, and persistent capital outflows toward developed markets. The result was a prolonged period of weak earnings growth, depressed valuations, and structural under-allocation by global investors. That backdrop is now beginning to reverse. A weaker US dollar is easing financial conditions, commodity prices are rising, and global fiscal expansion is driving demand for real assets and infrastructure. Unlike the 2002–2009 cycle, which was heavily dependent on China’s commodity demand, the next phase is expected to be broader and more diversified—with growth driven by financials and domestic demand in India, infrastructure and telecom in Africa, and policy-led recoveries across Latin America. For investors, this shift matters because emerging markets are coming off a low base. Valuations remain discounted relative to developed markets, capital is still under-allocated, and expectations are muted. This creates the conditions for asymmetric upside if the cycle continues to play out. However, this is unlikely to be a linear recovery. The biggest risk is global liquidity tightening, particularly from rising US bond yields and expanding fiscal deficits, which could slow growth and redirect capital flows. In the near term, this may lead to volatility or even a recession—but it could ultimately reset and extend the cycle, reinforcing the case for long-term outperformance. Lucerna’s portfolio reflects thematic bets on structural shifts and valuation disparities across emerging market regions and sectors. Disclaimer: This podcast is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. The views expressed by the hosts and guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Lucerna Global Capital or any of its officials. Nothing in this podcast should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any security or fund. Listeners should consult with a qualified professional for specific advice tailored to their individual circumstances. We are not responsible for any losses or liabilities incurred by acting on information from this podcast.

    59 min
  3. APR 16

    Where Value Still Lives: Evan Tindell

    An engaging conversation with Evan Tindell from Bireme Capital on what real value means in investing using Japan as a case study and how AI is transforming roles across industries. We also dive into what it truly takes to stand out as an investor in today’s world. TL;DR Investment Focus on Japan: Emphasizes undervalued firms like Daiwa Industries, worth $500M, with strong cash positions.Software Sector Insights: Japanese software companies offer attractive PE multiples compared to expensive US firms, despite AI challenges.AI in Investing: Simple algorithms remain effective; AI tools aid in research but don't replace professional investors yet.Behavioural Market Trends: Caution against conflating speculative behaviour with investing skill; prediction markets offer insights but require scepticism. The discussion with Evan Tindell focused on identifying undervalued market opportunities, particularly in Japan, and understanding evolving software industry dynamics. Japan’s investment appeal centres on undervalued companies with strong cash positions and improving corporate governance, despite an aging populationEvan highlighted Daiwa Industries, valued at approximately $500 million with an annual EBIT of $50-60 million and $400 million in net cashThe company’s ownership structure limits private equity intervention but ongoing regulatory reforms and activist funds are expected to reshape the market over the next decadePrivate equity interest in Japan is growing, with more funds and assets focused there than ever before, driven by a shift in market culture and regulatory easing Software sector challenges were discussed with emphasis on the impact of AI and market valuation corrections Certain Japanese software companies trade at single-digit PE multiples net of cash with low churn and moderate growth, presenting attractive investment opportunities versus expensive US counterpartsCost declines in technology development, such as low-code/no-code solutions, create efficiency pressures but also raise questions about future profit margins for traditional software firmsThe market is skeptical about software firms’ ability to maintain margins amid easier customer self-service and growing open-source alternatives, though support and security services still hold valueThe discussion highlighted behavioural trends in markets, gambling parallels, and the influence of prediction markets on decision-making. Evan noted a current peak in speculative behaviour and gambling disguised as investing, cautioning against conflating enthusiasm with skill or knowledgePrediction markets like Polymarket serve as useful aggregators of public sentiment and probability but remain a form of gambling with some information advantageEvan explained that the best odds come from people betting money on opposite outcomes, which often align with real probabilitiesThere is a potential risk, though limited, that these markets could influence political actors’ behaviour if they become widely monitored, especially in fragile regimesEvan speculated on scenarios like coups where prediction markets might serve as coordination signals for conspiratorsOverall, Evan sees prediction markets as a helpful tool in gauging probabilities but advises skepticism about their direct impact on major policymakingDisclaimer: This podcast is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or investment advice. The views expressed by the hosts and guests are their own and do not necessarily reflect the views of Bireme Capital or any of its officials. Nothing in this podcast should be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any security or fund. Listeners should consult with a qualified professional for specific advice tailored to their individual circumstances. We are not responsible for any losses or liabilities incurred by acting on information from this podcast.

    1h 3m

About

The global macro podcast. Long-form, unscripted conversations with the fund managers navigating rates, FX, commodities, emerging markets, and geopolitics across borders. Hosted by Krish Lohia and Rehan Ganapathy