Old dudes talking long cycles
Long term deflationist, recently flipped to being an inflationist. Thinks inflation could surge to 4% as early as 2021.Â
Prepare for Secular Inflation (Jan 2021)
https://www.macrovoices.com/938-macrovoices-256-russell-napier-prepare-for-secular-inflation
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p044vfmVvoA
Growing Wealth in an Inflation Avalanche (Feb 2021)
âLarge negative real interest rates will mean anyone wanting to protect wealth will have to borrow money. This is going to lead to large demand for credit, which will lead to rationing of credit.â (5 mins into this video)
Invest in countries with low debt to GDP ratios. Switzerland, Singapore...aside from those they are all in Emerging Markets. (21 mins)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=isoFAE-Xw2w
The age of inflation - Why I changed my view after 25 yearsÂ
https://worldoutofwhack.com/2020/06/30/the-age-of-inflation-why-i-changed-my-view-after-25-years-russell-napier/
Why in the World Would You Own Dollar Debt? (March 2021)
WAITING FOR THE LAST DANCE
The economics of investing in bonds (and most financial assets) has become stupid.Â
Rather than get paid less than inflation why not instead buy stuffâany stuffâthat will equal inflation or better?Â
If bond prices fall significantly that will produce significant losses for holders of them, which could encourage more selling.
Imagine what would happen if, for any or all of these reasons, the holders of these debt assets wanted to sell them.
History and logic show that central banks, when faced with the supply/demand imbalance situation that would lead interest rates to rise to more than is desirable in light of economic circumstances, will print the money to buy bonds and create âyield curve controlsâ to put a cap on bond yields and will devalue cash.
I believe cash is and will continue to be trash (returns that are negative relative to inflation) so it pays to a) borrow cash rather than to hold it as an asset and b) buy higher-returning, non-debt investment assets.Â
These tax changes could be more shocking than expected. For example, Elizabeth Warrenâs proposed wealth tax is of an unprecedented size that, based on my study of wealth taxes in other countries at other times, will most likely lead to more capital outflows and other moves to evade these taxes.Â
The United States could become perceived as a place that is inhospitable to capitalism and capitalists.
I believe a well-diversified portfolio of non-debt and non-dollar assets along with a short USD cash position is preferable to a traditional stock/bond mix that is heavily skewed to US dollars. I also believe that assets in the mature developed reserve currency countries will underperform the Asian (including Chinese) emerging countriesâ markets.Â
I also believe that one should be mindful of tax changes and the possibility of capital controls.
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/why-world-would-you-own-bonds-when-ray-dalio/
The Hazards of Asset Allocation in a Late-stage Major Bubble
The long, long bull market since 2009 has finally matured into a fully-fledged epic bubble. Featuring extreme overvaluation, explosive price increases, frenzied issuance, and hysterically speculative investor behavior, I believe this event will be recorded as one of the great bubbles of financial history, right along with the South Sea bubble, 1929, and 2000.
These great bubbles are where fortunes are made and lost. Positioning a portfolio to avoid the worst pain of a major bubble breaking is likely the most difficult part. Every career incentive in the industry and every fault of individual human psychology will work toward sucking investors in.
But this bubble will burst in due time, no matter how hard the Fed tries to support it, with consequent damaging effects on the economy and on portfolios. Make no mistake â for the majority of investors today, this could very well be the most important event of your investing lives.
It is highly probable that we are in a major bubble event in the U.S. market, of the type we typically have every several decades and last had in the late 1990s.
It will very probably end badly, although nothing is certain. I will also tell you my definition of success for a bear market call. It is simply that sooner or later there will come a time when an investor is pleased to have been out of the market.
Today the P/E ratio of the market is in the top few percent of the historical range and the economy is in the worst few percent. This is completely without precedent.
This time, more than in any previous bubble, investors are relying on accommodative monetary conditions and zero real rates extrapolated indefinitely.Â
This has in theory a similar effect to assuming peak economic performance forever: it can be used to justify much lower yields on all assets and therefore correspondingly higher asset prices.Â
But neither perfect economic conditions nor perfect financial conditions can last forever, and thereâs the rub.
As often happens at bubbly peaks, todayâs market features extreme disparities in value by asset class, sector, and company.Â
Those at the very cheap end include traditional value stocks all over the world, relative to growth stocks.Â
Value stocks have had their worst-ever relative decade ending December 2019, followed by the worst-ever year in 2020, with spreads between Growth and Value performance averaging between 20 and 30 percentage points for the single year!Â
Similarly, Emerging Market equities are at 1 of their 3, more or less co-equal, relative lows against the U.S. of the last 50 years. Not surprisingly, we believe it is in the overlap of these two ideas, Value and Emerging, that your relative bets should go, along with the greatest avoidance of U.S. Growth stocks that your career and business risk will allow. Good luck!
https://www.gmo.com/asia/research-library/waiting-for-the-last-dance/
The fact that we already see full asset prices so early in the recovery is a source of risk. But on the other hand, the fact that the economy is likely to grow for several years is very encouraging.
But the downtrend in rates is over. Thus, while interest rates can rise from here â implying higher demanded returns on everything and thus lower asset prices â they canât decline. This creates a negatively asymmetrical proposition.
So todayâs high asset prices may be justified at todayâs interest rates, but thatâs clearly a source of vulnerability if rates were to rise.Â
Can the Fed keep rates artificially low forever? On longer-maturity bonds? And what about inflation?Â
Can the 10-year Treasury note still yield 1.40% if inflation reaches 3%? Will people buy it at a negative real yield?Â
Reduced respect for the dollar (or increased quantities of dollars in circulation) could cause it to depreciate relative to the price of goods.
Is inflation a threat anytime soon? The answerâs clear: who knows?
How will we find jobs for all the people who are displaced by technology and automation and lack the skills required to participate in the information economy? What happens to parts of the country that are left out of the new economy?
With arguments on both sides, I feel the prices of most assets are in a gray area â certainly not low, mostly on the high side of fair, but not so high as to be unreasonable.
Because the primary risk lies in the possibility of rising inflation and the higher interest rates that would bring, I think portfolios have to make allowances: even though we canât predict, we should prepare.Â
This possibility means (a) bonds with maturities much above ten years are obvious candidates for underweighting and (b) inflation beneficiaries should be considered for overweighting, including floating-rate debt, real estate capable of seeing rent increases, and the stocks of companies with the power to pass on price increases and/or the potential for rapid earnings growth.
https://www.oaktreecapital.com/insights/howard-marks-memos
https://www.oaktreecapital.com/docs/default-source/memos/2020inreview.pdf
In his forecast for 2021, Jeffrey Gundlach predicted a âregime change.â Investors should prepare for themes that reverse prior trends: U.S. equities will underperform the rest of the world, inflation will rise, volatility will be higher, and the dollar will weaken.
https://www.advisorperspectives.com/articles/2021/01/12/gundlachs-forecast-for-2021-the-year-of-regime-change