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Use Some Common Sense When Listening To Fed's Comments
"Members agreed that the statement to be released after the meeting should
continue to convey that inflation risks remained the dominant concern and
that additional policy firming was possible." - From Federal Reserve
Minutes - October 24 & 25, 2006 Meeting
If you invest in stocks (SPY), gold (GLD), silver (SLV), bonds (SHY, TLT,
IEF), or commodities (DBC), you may try to interpret Federal Reserve statements
to garner some information about the direction of interest rates or the health
of the economy. The Federal Reserve talks tough on inflation to manage public
expectations. The Fed is well aware that (1) the economy is slowing, and (2)
we have structural problems (large deficits, credit growth, etc.) that will
keep inflation around for quite some time. Inflation should be tamer (at least
the published numbers) in the coming months as the economy begins to weaken,
but it is not going away in the longer-term (next 2 to 10 years). Actions speak
louder than words - the Fed talks tough on inflation and yet is not raising
rates with inflation running above their publicly stated comfort level. While
the public feels the Fed is tightening credit by raising rates, credit has
continued to expand, not contract, as the Fed raised interest rates numerous
times since early 2004.

Imagine how the economy and markets would react if the Fed said, "The economy
looks like it is headed toward a severe slowdown or a possible recession." They
can't say that. Investors need to know how to differentiate between what the
Fed says and what the Fed does. The odds are very high that the Fed is done
raising rates, despite their tough talk. The odds are also well over 50% that
the next move is a rate cut sometime as early as Q1 2007. The odds are almost
100% that at most we get one more hike before multiple cuts. The Fed is also
well aware of the history of housing bubbles. Again, they cannot make public
comments that the housing market most likely has a lot further to fall. Homebuyers
would dry up almost instantly.
While the Fed has made some serious blunders in the past, they are well educated
about the history of all markets. The real problem now is that they don't have
much room to navigate with interest rates either way since rate cuts will contribute
to more inflation, and rate hikes might really drive a nail in the housing
market's coffin. As a result, I expect all interest rate cycles (both up and
down) to be shorter in duration than the previous cycles. If and when they
lower rates, they will have a very difficult time going as low as they did
during the last reduction cycle.
Regardless of what happens in the short term, the long-term trends are for
more credit creation (some call it "money printing") and more inflation. Sometime
in the future, much like 1923 Germany, the credit bubble will pop and we will
move into deflation, but we are nowhere near that point right now. Deflation
(see Japan 1990s) would make all debts more burdensome throughout the entire
economy, including Medicare and Social Security.
In the long run, the Fed will use every weapon they have to prevent deflation.
We will most likely see hyperinflation sometime in the next 5 to 10 years,
followed by deflation. Deflation will arrive after the velocity of money accelerates
to record levels. Currently, the velocity of money is roughly where it was
in 1994 - significantly below the levels seen in 2000. Deflation is coming
and all the arguments for that are correct - they just have the timing wrong.
More inflation, leading to hyperinflation, followed by deflation is the most
likely outcome. That does not mean we will not have periods of deflation (we
may be entering one now) in the secular inflationary trend.
Therefore, if the assertions above are correct, it means bonds (SHY,IEF,TLT)
may be attractive in the next 18 months. However, in the long run, bonds appear
very unappealing when compared to gold (GLD), silver (SLV), or commodities
(DBC). U.S. stocks (SPY) may do well for a while longer, but are most likely
in for a tough time when the economic numbers can no longer support the soft
landing scenario. In the longer term, foreign stocks appear more attractive
vs. U.S. stocks when you factor in the weak outlook for the U.S. dollar.
These articles exapand on these topics and provide some sound reasoning for
the comments above:
Investing In Today's
Inflationary World
What Can We Learn
From 1923 Germany
The U.S. Dollar
vs. Gold: You Should Care
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Chris Ciovacco
Ciovacco Capital
Management
Chris Ciovacco is the Chief Investment Officer for Ciovacco
Capital Management, LLC. More on the web at www.ciovaccocapital.com.
All material presented herein is believed to be reliable
but we cannot attest to its accuracy. Investment recommendations may change
and readers are urged to check with their investment counselors and tax advisors
before making any investment decisions. Opinions expressed in these reports
may change without prior notice. This memorandum is based on information available
to the public. No representation is made that it is accurate or complete. This
memorandum is not an offer to buy or sell or a solicitation of an offer to
buy or sell the securities mentioned. The investments discussed or recommended
in this report may be unsuitable for investors depending on their specific
investment objectives and financial position. Past performance is not necessarily
a guide to future performance. The price or value of the investments to which
this report relates, either directly or indirectly, may fall or rise against
the interest of investors. All prices and yields contained in this report are
subject to change without notice. This information is based on hypothetical
assumptions and is intended for illustrative purposes only. THERE ARE NO WARRANTIES,
EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, AS TO ACCURACY, COMPLETENESS, OR RESULTS OBTAINED FROM
ANY INFORMATION CONTAINED IN THIS ARTICLE.
Ciovacco Capital Management, LLC is an independent money
management firm based in Atlanta, Georgia. CCM helps individual investors and
businesses, large & small; achieve improved investment results via research
and globally diversified investment portfolios. Since we are a fee-based firm,
our only objective is to help you protect and grow your assets. Our long-term,
theme-oriented, buy-and-hold approach allows for portfolio rebalancing from
time to time to adjust to new opportunities or changing market conditions.
Copyright © 2006-2008 Chris Ciovacco
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