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***More For Clients and Subscribers***
As Treasury Bill yields fell during the early 1930's, Treasury Bonds moved
in the opposite direction. As you can see from Table 48 (also from A
History of Interest Rates), Bonds rose in yield (fell in price) during
the banking crises of 1930-32.

Why Is This Significant?
The investment herd is currently engaged
in a Bond buying frenzy. They believe that inflation will be low for an
extended period. We agree. While we may have inflationary countertrend rises,
overall we are in a deflationary environment where banks fail, assets fall
and the economy deleverages. However as history shows, government bonds were
sold in the deflationary spiral of 1930-32. The excuses were two fold: liquidity
concerns and inflation fears. Banks sold bonds (their mortgages were frozen)
to raise cash reserves in case depositors decided to withdraw funds. In addition,
major government interventions at the time (sound familiar?) caused a fear
of long term inflation. The dumping of Treasury Bonds finally stopped in June
of 1932 (the same month as the stock market bottomed). So Bonds depreciated
in the historic deflation of the early 1930's, but is this relevant today?
The current bull market in Bonds has lasted since 1980. But only recently
has the Treasury Bond market registered a record extreme in bullish consensus
according to MBH Commodities' Daily Sentiment Index. Now for the first time
in 28 years, 99% of traders believe the upward trend will continue. Remember
when everyone thought real estate could only go up in value? At this
point, the Treasury Bond market is swaggering around, certain of its own opinion
that it cannot fall.
"Pride goes before destruction, And a haughty spirit before
stumbling." - Proverbs 16:18
Pride or Prayer
After an extreme in market emotion (greed or fear) occurs, prudent investors
should wait for the inevitable violent reversal and then position themselves
to profit from the new trend. The longer it takes to reach the extreme, the
bigger the turn. And don't forget:
"Markets can remain irrational far longer than you or
I can remain solvent." - John Maynard Keynes
Timing is everything.
Bailout Anger
Politicians are trying to inject confidence into markets by bailing out certain
institutions, industries and/or groups. Instead bailouts are having the opposite
effect, dividing the country into bailout recipients versus everyone else.
Folks here in Alabama are incensed. Slicing up society does not improve confidence.

So why even contemplate this type of policy? Politicians love Keynesian economics
(which rationalizes government spending and bailouts) because it allows them
to enrich their friends and supporters. They rely on the Broken
Window Fallacy to hide the true costs of bailouts. But Keynesian economic
theory is a disaster for the economy. Average Americans (and their children)
will pay for bailouts through higher mortgage payments, currency devaluation,
unemployment and higher taxes. This is the difference between a quick blowout
and a long depression.
"Deflation is a great liberating force because it destroys the economic basis
of the social engineers, spin doctors, and brain washers." - Guido Jörg
Hülsmann, Deflation and Liberty.
So what can we do to minimize the damage? Please get involved
with the non-partisan Peter G. Peterson Foundation that is pressing Congress
to address the national debt. They have recently released a free
30-minute clip of their documentary: I.O.U.S.A.
Wall Street and T-Bills
Wall Street will never recommend Treasury Bills. The reason? They can't
make money off of them. Brokers receive no commission (or very little)
for purchasing Treasury Bills. Current T-Bill yields are also below expenses
for most money market funds. Some Treasury-only money market funds are even
closing to new money or completely shutting down. In contrast, we will continue
to lower expenses for investors seeking investment management in a low rate
environment. Our strategy is to place investor's interests above our own as
we build a different kind of investment firm.
Investing Against the Herd
The House of Rothschild, a 1934 movie, depicts a major financial panic
in London in 1815. Rumors of a British defeat at Waterloo run rampant. Everyone
is dumping shares, except for Nathan Rothschild. He is buying. The Panic reaches
a climax when rumors of his own failure reach the market. You can see how Rothschild's
contrarian strategy fares on YouTube.
***No graph, chart, formula or other device offered can in and
of itself be used to make trading decisions. This newsletter should not be
construed as personal investment advice. It is for informational purposes only.
Have A Happy New Year!
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