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Now that yields on ten-year Treasuries have cracked through 5%, on their way
to infinity and beyond, many on Wall Street are wondering how high rates must
go before bonds begin to draw investors away from stocks.
Most equity analysts are sounding the all-clear by proclaiming that 5.25%
- 5.5% ten-year yields do not offer a significant threat to stocks. Although
I agree that this is true, I don't share their confidence that 5.5% represents
any kind of a ceiling for rates. The important issue is not the point at which
bonds become attractive relative to stocks. Rather it is the point at which
they regain their attraction to foreign central banks, whose massive purchases
of Treasuries have lost steam amidst rising global rates and lost confidence
in the U.S. Dollar, and to private foreign savers, who have already abandoned
treasuries for better performing assets.
The truth is that the fundamental lack of appeal of Treasuries on the global
market means that rates will rise considerably from here, which is very bearish
for stocks indeed. Given the real rate of inflation (not the phony rate implied
by the CPI) and the potential for a protracted decline in the value of the
dollar, rates must rise significantly in order to convince overseas buyers
to stay in the game.
However, a significant move up in interest rates will depress corporate earnings
considerably. Not only do corporations themselves have debt to service, but
so do their customers, particularly those with adjustable rate mortgages. If
higher mortgage payments consume a greater share of discretionary income, then
consumers will have less money to spend on other goods or services. Compounding
the problem for stocks is the fact that while higher interest rates depress
earnings, those diminished earnings themselves will need to be discounted by
a higher factor: a double whammy for stock prices!
A falling stock market however would be just a minor casualty resulting from
significantly higher rates. A bigger concern is the health of the over-leveraged
U.S. economy itself. Interest rates high enough to offer an attractive yield
to foreigners would be a disaster for U.S. consumers awash in credit card and
adjustable rate mortgage debt, corporations issuing record amounts of low-rated
bonds, and the Federal government itself, which continues to issue record amounts
of Treasury bonds. To bail out the strapped debtors, prop up falling asset
prices and limit loan defaults, the Fed will need to pursue a more inflationary
monetary policy. The resulting surge in inflation would render unattractive
any bond yield previously thought to be attractive. What would be gained nominally
would be lost in real terms.
In fact, our nation has spent so much money that we did not have to buy foreign
products we could not afford, and amassed such staggering amounts of debt collateralized
by inflated assets, that it is now virtually impossible for bonds to ever offer
competitive real yields. The only way that could happen would be for the Fed
to stand idly by and allow our economic house of cards to collapse and tighten
monetary policy while it happened. Even then, bond prices would collapses,
but under that scenario at least they would bottom out. If the Fed tries to "rescue" the
economy, it's a bottomless pit!
It is amazing that citizens of a savings-short nation so completely dependent
on foreigners to finance its borrowing can remain oblivious to the threat of
higher interests rates should foreigners lend elsewhere. Recent action in the
bond market suggests that this arrogant false-confidence is about to be shattered.
For a more in depth analysis of the tenuous position of the Americana economy
and U.S. dollar denominated investments, read my new book "Crash Proof: How
to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse." Click
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More importantly make sure to protect your wealth and preserve your purchasing
power before it's too late. Discover the best way to buy gold at www.goldyoucanfold.com,
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and subscribe to my free, on-line investment newsletter at http://www.europac.net/newsletter/newsletter.asp.
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