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In
less than one year -- between Oct. 29, 2007 to Oct. 27, 2008 -- global stock
markets (represented by the MSCI Barra, All Country World Index in USD) declined
52.3%. Yes, by a half. Such an experience again proves that the collective
expectations of the world of investors can be spectacularly wrong. Earlier
in the decade, the S&P500 index also collapsed by a similar ratio. If there
is any good news at this point it is that equity markets today are nearer reasonable
values. As such, it has taken two brutal equity bear markets to squeeze out
the stock bubble of the late 1990s. Of course, well diversified portfolios
will have escaped the full brunt of these equity market downdrafts.
The months of September and October have been particularly difficult. If there
was ever much doubt, the steep declines of the past 60 days have swept away
all uncertainty. Many questions have now been answered decisively. Were financial
systems vulnerable to meltdown? Was globalization so advanced that no nation
could uncouple from the downdraft? Was a global recession in the offing? Could
stock markets around the world yet crash further? The answers are now clear.
Now that the worst has happened, what next?
Most likely, not what the consensus now thinks. For one, it doesn't necessarily
follow that more great crashes still lie ahead. That has already happened.
Lower stock market levels are still possible at some point in various countries...
perhaps early next year. But in the main, the horses have already bolted the
gate and a new global investment environment is already beginning to take shape.
Huge initiatives and behavioral changes are now underway, both at the domestic
and international levels.
Bear with us, we are now definitely leaning towards optimism for the long-term.
That may sound cavalier given the obvious economic deterioration at present
and yet ahead. In recent years, we were among the few who warned of unacceptably
high risk levels and the unsustainability of underlying developments. That
harvest has now been reaped (unfortunate, because it wasn't necessary)
and the worst has happened.
But, crucially, this is now past tense.
But let's be realistic. Reactions to the past and current crises are still
playing out. For now, most financial trends still continue to be shaped by
fear, even though tentative signs of an unfreezing of banking systems are appearing.
Such frights are warranted to an extent. But a new paradigm will be sure to
unfold -- only the interim timing and the global pattern yet to be determined--
some of its features already apparent. But before economic speed is again recovered,
some gear shifts first need to take place.

The first one has to do with consumer debt. Real demand is now down-shifting
to the rate of household income growth. Imagine that -- demand growth that
is not dependent on net new debt? That will seem like a radical idea to recent
generations. But actually, this is the only sure-fire prescription for sustainable,
stable long-term growth.
A second gear shift follows the first, and is best characterized as the global
decoupling of China's export growth engine from America's debt-induced consumption
bubble sump (both households and government). These shifts will be disruptive
for the time being. But the quicker the better. Eventually, a rebalanced China
and other hyperdriven net-export countries will be on steadier footing.
A third gear shift is already substantially complete (though not quite)
and that is the recalibration of stock market values relative to underlying
profits and income. Lastly, one fourth and final shift will soon be underway,
we think, and that is a return to higher real interest rates. That will present
both hurdles and opportunities, but more on this shortly.
Main Features of the Next Global Cycle
Let's next review the main features that we expect will unfold globally over
the next 3 to 5 years. Also, please note the three different recovery scenarios
and their respective probabilities that we outlined in the Global Spin of August
2008. We see no reason to alter them, still expecting that these will play
out in sequential fashion. Briefly, we dubbed these scenarios: #1. Global Purgatory
(Turning Japanese, I Really Think So); #2. New World Paradigm (Global Infrastructure
Cycle); and #3. Global Boom (Inflationary Infrastructure Boom). Right now,
we are still in economic purgatory. Turning to the main features of the new
global economic/financial paradigm (some of these already foreshadowed by
recent trends):
1. A New Global Wealth Order. Here, we mean, that the distribution
of real wealth creation around the world will be tilted away from the high-income
deficit countries. America and other deficit countries will face a stagflationary
(now, more likely to be a stag-deflationary) environment, producing
little real growth for 2 years or more. Here, deleveraging on the household
balance sheet must first occur, which will be a good thing ... like taking
cod liver oil by spoon. While global economic growth will be much slower
than in recent years, most of this growth will be found in industrializing/globalizing
countries such as India, Brazil and others.
2. Higher Real Interest Rates. Inflationary or wealth translation
effects caused by government-backed bailouts of the banking system as well
as new, stimulus spending must be considered. This will maim parts of the
world economy for the time being, both with respect to retarding demand as
well as fixed-income market performance. This will mean that the deficit
countries will be choked by high real interest rates. While that will be
good for the fortunes of retirees (and eventually, also again raise the
attractions of fixed-income as an investment asset) it ensures that "over
consumption" and large trade deficits will be ruthlessly squeezed further.
3. Global Infrastructure Spending Boom. This is an expenditure category
everybody will love and endorse over the next few years. For developed countries,
such as the US, this is a spending that carries a high stimulus punch. Deficit
spending will be directed to new roads, electric transmission and transportation
systems. MoodysEconomy.com recently estimated that for every $1 increase
in infrastructure spending, overall GDP growth is boosted by $1.59. That
would represent very effective stimulus spending for governments, especially
so in the US where infrastructure generally is considered in poor disrepair.
Developing nations, too, all still have high infrastructure needs. And, alternative
energy development remains a high priority.
Frankly, the above features once they unfold -- assuming that the world makes
it out of economic purgatory, and the necessary interim transmission shifts
do not strip any gears -- couldn't represent a more favorable mix for stable,
balanced growth and attractive investment portfolio returns.
All of the stock market sectors that stand to benefit from the above trends
can now be bought at reasonable levels ... some even inexpensive. And, as for
emerging markets, although one needs to be selective, these have also been
marked down enormously ... as much as 60% and more. Good values can now be
found here as well.
But First, Some Putting Challenges
However, before the new global paradigm can bloom to full flower, several
challenges remain. Its a bit like playing a mini-golf hole that is obstructed
by swinging timbers. There is a smooth, green surface on the other side, but
you first have to make it past the careening logs. Any one of them can throw
a portfolio out of bounds. Right now, there remain a few of these swinging
logs to contend with. Here we point out three of the bigger hazards that active
portfolios will need to navigate through:
1. A Wall of New Government Bond Issues. The first side-swipe to
avoid is the effect of massive deficit spending upon the bond market. While
some high-yield sectors (at least, what now appear to be valued at highyield
levels) can offer opportunity, the rest of the USgovernment- backed bond
sector could be a trap. A massive wall of treasury bond issues is barreling
down the pike. Even the US Treasury's acting undersecretary, Anthony Ryan,
admits as much, saying "This year's financing needs will be unprecedented." Barring
a collapse in imports and oil consumption, the US current account is sure
to soar. (The BCA recently estimated this deficit may soar as high as
13% of GDP!)
As such, we expect that the US dollar will be reappraised and sold off.
As soon as liquidity fears subside, money will go back up the risk curve,
leaving "safe haven" bond sectors in the dust. But when? Could this be when
China offers to lend its huge cache of foreign government bonds to Western
foreign central banks? Or, when the upcoming G20 meetings scheduled for Washington
and Paris draft up new Bretton Woods II? We don't know what the catalyst
will be, if not having occurred already. Actually, government bond markets
are already behaving poorly.
Over the next year, it is highly probable that stocks will outperform bonds.
As such, portfolios should already begin to reflect this shift.
2. Repatriated Foreign Portfolio Capital. For several years, US-based
investors have benefited from a declining US-dollar by investing abroad.
To illustrate, while the MSCI EAFE Index (which covers developed equity
markets outside of North America) rose 29% in local currency terms between
October 2005 and its top 2 years later (October 2007) the US dollar based
return rang in at 52% over this same time frame.
Needless to say, this attracted portfolio capital to move abroad, setting
up a virtuous circle. State Street Global Markets recently estimated that
as much as $5 trillion in US portfolio capital had found a home overseas.
We have always thought that when this money runs back home, the US dollar
would rally. Indeed, recently repatriation of foreign portfolio capital has
in fact been in a stampede.
In the crush of this rush, the US dollar has spiked exacerbating losses
and sending international markets stumbling even faster than US domestic
markets. Losses to US-based investors have been magnified. As such, not only
is the US facing one of the toughest of recessions of all developed nations
due to macroeconomic reasons alone, magnified portfolio losses for households
and pension funds now add an additional dimension of stress.
Even respectable Canada -- one of the very few OECD nations to achieve a
government budget (to this point, at least) and trade surplus -- has bitten
the hand of its southern neighbor. The here-to-fore darling market of overseas
and US investors -- both its currencies and stock markets having risen to
unsustainably ridiculous levels through these manic adulations -- has now
stung them as badly as a banana frontier market. To add insult to injury,
not only did resource markets collapse, so did the Canadian dollar. In less
than 120 days, US-based investors would have suffered a maximal loss of 53%
from the CAD market high (June 18th).
When can the portfolio repatriations be expected to stop? We cannot be sure.
However, this development stands to play a role in this next golf putting
hazard.
3. A US Dollar Whipsaw. One of the great conundrums of recent times
is the strength of the US dollar ... or so it is popularly thought. How could
the US, the "ground zero" of global financial collapse, sport a strong currency?
At this surface, this does seem absurd, especially given the large financing
requirement of the US current account deficit. However, it is only a shortterm
phenomenon in our view, one that is explainable.
We have already pointed out the influence of repatriated portfolio capital.
Yet, the catalyst to this trend was likely something very different. To recall,
the US dollar had already fallen to an undervalued level earlier this year
(under 1.60 to the euro). At this level, the euro was overvalued by
more than two standard deviations, according to our currency valuation methodology.
The dollar was therefore vulnerable to a rally ... at least for an interim.
Then, the financial busts began, these at first stemming from the sub-prime
mortgage excesses. Bear Stearns was the first over the brink. The cracks
quickly spread and then the "global ring fencing" began in earnest. Shaky
financial institutions (and others), sensing troubles, quickly shifted
their choice financial assets back to the US (the country of their head
office) and importantly, favorable bankruptcy and creditor laws.
In our view, that started the USD trend to tip, this cascade later to be
joined by frightened portfolio capital. But this is not a trend that can
be sustained indefinitely. We expect the US dollar to again weaken ... possibly
back to the 1.50 level versus the euro. Given the expectation of $1 trillion-sized
budget deficits, there will be a surfeit of US dollars looking for foreign
buyers in the next year.
Portfolio Setbacks: Post Game Analysis
Many investors will be asking whether it was at all possible to entirely escape
the financial carnage of the last year. Yes, this was possible ... but only
for a very, very few. There may be investors that are nimble and prescient
enough to reliably move all their assets from one life boat to another before
they sink. But, these be gods. That all investors can move to safer ground,
then to precisely time the purchase of new undervalued assets, is a myth. It
is not possible. Consider that the total value of cash and government bonds
as a percentage of global wealth is less than 25%. True liquidity -- cash deposits
and quality money market investments -- represent an even smaller sliver of
total wealth.
Remarkably little capital is shifted during crisis periods in any case, as
liquidity tends to dry up. And by nature, it is the most popular investments
(since these tend to become large market capitalizations) that cause
the greatest underperformance mistakes. As such, a tactical and balanced investment
approach is best suited to long-term growth. Not all losses will be avoided,
but neither will upsides be missed and the mistakes of emotional investing
compounded.
So far this year, it was not reasonably possible for longonly, balanced portfolio
managers -- at least not throughout the September/October period -- to bring
in positive returns. In our case, up until the end of August this year, most
portfolios had still been flat to positive year-to-date. We may have been too
self-congratulatory at the time, considering how badly others investors may
have been fairing.
Then the bottom -- literally, like the trap door on the gallows -- fell out.
By the end of October, it was realized that the capitalization of the entire
world equity market had halved in value from the prior peak. However, this
was not the worst of it. Shockingly, bond markets did not perform as usually
can be expected during stock market collapses and panic phases.
It certainly cannot be said that a new bond bull market has begun. In fact,
large parts of the bond market -- anything not government-guaranteed by a relatively
trusted sovereign country -- were also crushed. During the previous equity-market
rout of 2001 to 2002, North American investors could at least move into the
bond market ... even better, at the time, euro-denominated bonds.
Conclusion: Opportunities in Midst of Adversity
For US-based investors, the dynamics we have described go a long way to explain
why hedge and mutual fund redemptions have been torrential in recent months.
The enormous decline in global equity values is one more contributing factor
to the perfect storm that has hit US households. Not only have home values
declined at the fastest pace on record, investment portfolios and retirement
capital has been sliced, as well. In the meantime, the great hope for the US
economy also been forestalled -- export growth. Not only is it now expected
that global demand will decrease, the US dollar soared against the euro by
over 20% thus undermining pricing competitiveness.
Looking ahead, the US economy faces an unavoidably difficult, grinding adjustment
phase, perhaps lasting 2 to 3 years ... if not resisted in some way. It is
only in this sense that the future looks unclear. Either, household savings
rates, external capital deficits and balance sheets -- from national, to household
and corporate -- begin to mend, or the nation embarks on a wild program of
manipulated, hollow solutions, resulting in even greater and longer crises.
Which outcome will occur? The jury is out. We hope for the former outcome.
But frankly, this is not yet certain. It may be too late for a society that
may have become either too coddled or debt-strapped.
We are reminded of the responses of citizens in some of the Asian countries
during the Asian crises of 1997 to 1998. People knuckled under, accepted responsibility,
and even collected gold and jewelry to pay off national debts (yes, this
happened in South Korea). They did not expect
governments to bail them out of their mortgage payments and past profligacies.
As it was, there was little of either. Indeed, recent financial collapses have
been tragic, as really none of this was ever necessary had more sensible policies
and capital market policing prevailed. No doubt, short-term market trends are,
and will, remain unpredictable. However, here we are referring to long-running
trends and policies that were evident for years, all of which had one thing
in common -- unsustainability. The obvious lessons that have been learned once
again are that unsustainable trends must eventually stop and that long-term
problems eventually become today's problems.
Yet, remarkably, our longer-term outlook, in terms of major strategic and
regional themes has not changed much. It does not depend entirely upon what
happens in the US as is the new global growth paradigm will likely not be UScentric
in any case. It is a global story. And, if anything, our longer-term outlook
for global growth is becoming cautiously more optimistic given the radical
adjustments that are now occurring ... assuming that all the interim shifts
we have outlined actually unfold.
What has changed -- these being the reasons we have change our minds? For
one, the speed of engagement. In other words, the rapidity of the transition
phase. Stock markets have fallen more quickly and collateral financial damage
has been much wider. The fear that this has produced has galvanized incredible
behavioral changes as well as interventions. In fact, relative to history,
these changes border on the unprecedented.
Recent economic statistics show that attitudinal shifts have been cathartic
virtually everywhere, mostly certainly in North America. For example, US auto
sales in October virtually stopped -- down 31% from year-ago levels -- the
worst in 29 years. The ISM Index (Institute of Supply and Management) recently
declined to the lowest level since 1983. Order backlogs for trucks have virtually
disappeared. Many other statistics suggest that the focus has turned to balance
sheets. Behavior has indeed changed ... overnight. Households are saving again!
In the meanwhile, investors continue to stampede out of mutual funds and hedge
funds in droves at the highest pace on record. Despite that US households showed
net-negative financial investment over the past few years -- hardly portraying
an investment mania as in the 1990s dotcom bubble -- these outflows have nevertheless
still proven to be violent. Unfortunately, these outflows are now happening
at an inopportune time and likely are heading into cash and other investment
assets that will likely underperform.
All in all, there are hopeful signs that the road to recovery has begun. And,
negative investment sentiment is now vulnerable to improving expectations.
Without a doubt, it is time to reinvest cash and position portfolios for a
long-term global rebound.
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