As you have no doubt noticed, I've dramatically slowed my posting activity.
I have a head cold and can't seem to find the energy to do many charts, much less summarize the results of my last poll. That's okay though, because with $100 oil I think a lot of people are having a hard time finding the energy!
So here's my 2008 list of general predictions and observations for the New Year (and quite possibly for many, many years into the future).
- There are too many houses.
- There are too many banks.
- There are too many restaurants.
- There are too many shopping malls.
- There are too many airlines.
- The era of cheap food is over.
- The era of cheap energy is over.
- Unemployment will continue to climb.
- The stock market will stagnate (inflation adjusted).
- Real (inflation adjusted) yields will continue to drop.
- China will not decouple from us, nor will the rest of the world.
- Stagflation (slowing growth with above normal inflation) will continue.
I also believe that these trends will continue far longer than most (those who have only been investing in the 1980s and 1990s anyway) think is even remotely possible. That's fairly depressing. Let's hope I'm a pessimist and/or I'm missing some part of the big picture.
Here's what I am doing about it.
I bought (and continue to buy) as many I-Bonds as the government would allow. Based on today's very low real interest rates (and potential risks that inflation might continue to rise), the 1.20% I-Bond is a great relative bargain. It earns an inflation adjusted 1.2% vs. just 1.00% (as of today) on the 5 Year TIPS. It doesn't take a financial wizard to see that the I-Bond is the better choice, especially since it is tax deferred! It also doesn't take a financial wizard to theorize why the government just reduced the maximum amount of I-Bonds you can buy starting this year. I think it is fairly clear that the government is bracing for stagflation (doesn't mean it is necessarily correct though, nor does it mean I am necessarily correct either).
The bulk of my investments are in TIPS (treasury inflation protected securities) and three month treasury bills.
I am reducing some of my three month treasury bill exposure. The real yield now appears to be negative. I'm using that money to participate in:
- January's 10 Year TIPS auction
- January's 20 Year TIPS auction
- Non-perishable hoarding (i.e., Costco purchases)
The auctions don't come around all that often. The real yield on the 20 Year is 1.89% today. It has dropped considerably in the past month. I was hoping the economy would hold together until after the auctions. Santa Claus appears to have left town early and he's taken his rally with him. Oh well! As is the case in any auction, it is generally not a good plan to tell others ahead of time. However, I doubt very much that the "big money" is actively reading my anonymous blog looking for investment advice, lol. Based on how far the yields have already dropped, I'm fairly confident the "big money" continues to make that bet anyway.
This is NOT investment advice. I am simply saying what I plan to do based on the things I believe. The money I will be parking in the 20 Year TIPS is money I intended to use to buy I-Bonds. The government took much of that option away from me. It is also money I will be needing in 20 years. The government has taken yet another step into pushing me into more risky investments (since TIPS are riskier than I-Bonds). The first step was lowering interest rates again to stimulate the economy. Unfortunately, it is not having the desired effect (on me). I'm not "investing" in any of our many housing markets, banks, restaurants, shopping malls, or airlines.
Here's a chart that summarizes my stagflationary thoughts rather well.
In my opinion, that's a classic dead cat bounce. Real yields have been struggling for years. It is the #1 reason I am a stagflationist. I don't see much in the chart to change my mind. If anything, it looks to be getting worse. Real yields turned negative in the 1970s on a great many investments. These paltry real yields of today might be worth salivating over if we continue to muddle through. They can get worse, much worse. It can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Once hoarding starts (a driver of price inflation), it becomes very difficult to stop the hoarding behavior. Nothing says hoard like earning a negative real interest rate (and then be taxed on the "gain" as well).
The deflationists (such as Mish) keep pointing to the money supply to support their deflationary cases (even as oil rises to $100, gold hits $860, and the year over year CPI breaches 4% even as housing prices decline). If anyone finds out what they are smoking, I'd sure like some. There is a LOT of actual money floating around out there. I'm looking at money supply and all I see is a scary chart. You'd think the government spent 25+ years handing out money for free. That's what I think. In fact, that's exactly what I think. Positive real rates were handed to savers as a reward for not hoarding goods. It was a delaying tactic to temporarily thwart consumer price inflation as we fell off the gold standard.
1990Government: What are you thinking?
Investor: I'm buying a gallon of gasoline with my dollar.Government: We'll reward you with another dollar if you don't.Investor: Okay.2005Government: What are you thinking?
Investor: I'm buying a gallon of gasoline with my two dollars.Government: Here's another dollar! Don't do it!
Investor: Okay.2007Government: What are you thinking?Investor: I've got $3 but can no longer buy a gallon of gasoline.Government: Can't help you. We printed too many dollars.Investor: But I need more dollars!Government: That's some conundrum.Investor: Well, at least I have $3.Government: Not quite. You owe tax on the $2 we gave you.As a saver, I'm heavily inclined to hoard hard goods that I will someday need if there isn't an incentive to stop me. What is the reward to stop the savers from hoarding these days? A taxable 3% return on short-term treasury bills when year over year inflation is over 4% certainly isn't much of a reward. It is a punishment. Why would I hoard paper fiat dollars over toilet paper? Do I think the price of toilet paper is going to suddenly fall in price? I know I will need dollars but I also know I will need toilet paper. I therefore see very little downside (pun intended ;)) in locking in my long-term toilet paper price right now, lol.
I wish to offer thanks to all that have posted comments on my blog. Words cannot express how much it has helped me to be able to bounce my ideas off of you. This is not a long-term goodbye. I will be posting more in the future, especially as conditions change. I just don't feel the need to keep beating a dead horse. Or perhaps the saying should be beating a dead house?
I'm not going to devote my life to watching the economy crumble (if indeed it does). I can say I have little hope for the future. Just look who we put in charge of it two times in a row.
And when somebody builds a new building somebody has got to come and build the building. And when the building expanded it prevented additional opportunities for people to work. - George W. Bush, October 3, 2007
One has a stronger hand when there's more people playing your same cards. - George W. Bush, October 11, 2006
See Also:
Extremely Bad News for I-Bonds!The Death of Real YieldsSource Data:
Tentative Treasury Auction DatesU.S. Treasury Real Yield Curve RatesBLS: Consumer Price Indexes (CPI)St. Louis Fed: MZMSt. Louis Fed: PopulationThe Complete Bushisms