|
It is crucial to understand what one of the key drivers of global economic
growth is today. If investors can realize what is occurring, they will know
that a protracted sell off in the commodity and equity markets is probably
not in the cards for several more years.
Central bankers have not been deterred from their primary objective, which
is to try to engender prosperity by printing money, and it is this inflation
masquerading as growth that is deceiving most investors. Unfortunately, our
new Federal Reserve chairman is no exception.
Ben Bernanke cooed right on cue at his April 27th testimony before congress,
stating that the campaign to raise interest rates might take a pause even if
rates are not yet balanced. Since this message was repeated after the FOMC's
latest meeting, the markets clearly glimpsed the emergence of his pinfeathers
as those of a dove, a dove that fears recession far more than inflation.
There are three salient questions that must be asked at this juncture. If
the U.S. economy is as strong as most pundits' claim, why is the dollar falling
precipitously? If inflation expectations are low, why are gold and virtually
every commodity soaring? And why are some of the major market averages near
record highs, when the economy is expected to slow and interest rates are rising?
The answer to all of these questions is that inflation is here and much more
virulent than professed. The apparent strength the global economy is experiencing
is being spurred by excess liquidity both domestically and worldwide. The dollar
is losing its interest rate-driven support in anticipation of the fed ceasing
to raise rates and it will likely continue to adjust downward against foreign
currencies with a more favorable rate outlook. The fact that the mainstream
media and administration representatives like to promulgate the notion that
inflation is low does not deceive the commodity markets. Excessive liquidity
is finding a home in real stores of value and it is this superfluous monetary
creation that is sending the equity averages to such lofty levels.
I believe the economy's rate of growth is slowing while the rate of monetary
creation continues to grow unabated. Moreover, if the economy heads towards
recession, Ben Bernanke is likely to increase the rate of monetary creation
even further and lower the cost of money simultaneously, especially since the
main driver for a slowing economy may continue to be the weakening housing
market. According to CNN/Money, 22% of the 8.7 trillion mortgages held by Americans
will reset in 2006, which means a typical 3-year a.r.m. will go from 3.6% to
5.6%. On a 500k mortgage, the monthly payment would increase by $800, which
should exacerbate an already struggling real estate market.
Given the crosscurrents of today's economy and the likelihood of further softness
in housing, investors would be wise to shy away from consumer discretionary
stocks and focus on high yielding foreign equities. That defensive strategy
gives you a hedge against a falling dollar and the cushion of dividends. Although
I am not sanguine on the U.S. stock market, I do not align myself with most
perennial bears. What they tend to overlook is that elevated inflation rates
tend to bolster most asset classes, which can include common stocks for longer
than expected. Even though a correction in commodity, equities and especially
housing markets seems quite possible in the near-term, don't look for a collapse
in these markets until the dollar falls apart, a risk in today's market, but
an event that might materialize a lot later in the future than many might expect.
The Dollar has a Bernanke problem. Inflation is running strong. Such concerns
should govern an investor's thinking today, but keep in mind these are long
running sagas, not story lines that are likely to bring about cataclysm at
any moment.
**Investors are increasingly turning to Canada for energy sector exposure.
To learn more, get "Go North!" our exclusive, free report on Canadian
royalty trusts.
|