Inflation’s Coming! Hide Here…
Aug 27th, 2009 | By Contrarian Profits | Category: Top StoryIs this the beginning of a new bull market or just a last-gasp bear market rally? We just don’t know. We’ve got a hunch is all. According to value investing guru David Dremen, it doesn’t matter much, either. As he put it recently in Forbes:
The big question preoccupying the talkers at CNBC is whether the post-March upturn is the beginning of a new bull market or only a pause in a bear market that will last for years. Don’t obsess over figuring out the answer. Markets are always perverse and unpredictable. Instead of trying to time your next buys and sells, think about what is going to happen over the next decade and how you will cope with it. You should be thinking about the purchasing value of the dollar.
Dremen, like your Notes editors, believes we are in for a bout of “wild inflation” – something along the lines of what we saw from 1979 to 1982. (For those of you too young to remember, this period saw the CPI rise 13% a year and long-dated US Treasurys yield as much as 15%.) Why this dire outlook? This, again, from Dremen:
Simply because our Treasury and its counterparts in other countries are printing money around the clock. They are also printing bonds, and with the same objective: reviving stagnant economies. The Keynesian belief that large fiscal stimulus is crucial to ending an economic downturn is prevalent among policymakers worldwide. No democratic government could stay in power these days if it didn’t undertake countermeasures against unemployment, the possibility of deflation and the worst financial crisis since the 1930s. It is inevitable that all this stimulus will be followed at some point by a period of rapidly rising prices.Central banks, including our not-so-omniscient Federal Reserve, will again fail to take the punch bowl away from the party soon enough, keeping stimulative polices going far past the point when unemployment has turned a corner and the financial debacle is behind us. Treasury Secretary Geithner and Fed boss Bernanke are trapped by politics and events. They make pronouncements downplaying the inflation threat, but inflation will hit like a tsunami within three years, maybe sooner..
So what can you do about this threat to your savings? First, sell long bonds. When inflation hits long-bond prices are going to plummet as yields skyrocket. Remember, bond market crashes can be as bad as stock market crashes.
Dremen also recommends repositioning your portfolio with heavier weightings in oil, natural resources and cyclical stocks… and cutting back on utilities and consumer staples. If you believe, like we do, that a crash in stocks is coming, hold off on buying stocks until values come off their current highs – buy the dips.
The third weapon in your armory against inflation is real estate. Dremen reckons real estate will be “one of the best investments in the years ahead.” Remember Buffett’s great contrarian maxim: “Be fearful when other are greedy and greedy when others are fearful.”
Also keep in mind Steve Sjuggerud’s rule of thumb for successful investing: buy assets that are cheap, hated and on an upswing.