Posts Tagged ‘Archangels’
Bill Gross: Investment Outlook (December 2009)
Friday, November 20th, 2009
Bill Gross, Co-Chief at PIMCO has just released his latest investment outlook, titled Anything but 0.1%. Gross reveals that he is worried that bubbles are forming as a result of zero interest rate policy. This is a must read issue.
Listen to the newsletter, read by Bill Gross:
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On one hand Gross says it is prohibitive to stay for too long in money market instruments yielding next to nothing. On the other hand Gross says that zero interest rates are forcing investors back out on to the risk spectrum.
Ah, but this is not a vindictive diatribe, although to me, money changers resemble Mammon more than archangels, and they all make too much money, including PIMCO. My point is to recognize, and to hope that you recognize, that an effective zero percent interest rate, as a price for hiding in a foxhole, is prohibitive. Like the American doughboys near France’s future Maginot line in WWI – slumping day after day in a muddy, rat-infested pit – when the battalion commander finally blew his whistle to charge the enemy lines, it probably was accompanied by some sense of relief; anything, anything but this! Anything but .01%!
Recently, approximately $20 billion a week has been exiting those payless, seemingly godless funds in search of a higher-yielding Nirvana. Yet, as Will Rogers knew, and Lehman Brothers demonstrated to another generation, the pain of the foxhole can immediately transition to the dodging of real bullets on the investment battlefield. Moving out on the risk asset spectrum has worked wonders since March of this year, but it comes with the risk of principal loss – failing to receive the return of your money. When viewed from 30,000 feet, there is even a systemic risk that new asset bubbles are in the formative stages – perhaps because of the .01%. Gold at $1,130 an ounce, global equity markets up 60-70% from their 2009 lows, a cascading dollar now 15% lower against a basket of global currencies just 12 months ago, oil at 80 bucks, mortgage rates at 4% thanks to a $1 trillion dollar credit card from the Fed; the list goes on. The legitimate question of the day is, “Is a 0% funds rate creating the next financial bubble, and if so, will the Fed and other central banks raise rates proactively – even in the face of double-digit unemployment?” As Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said in a recent speech, “This notion is often described as an imperative to ‘lean against a bubble,’ meaning that a central bank should act to lower asset prices that by historical standards seem unusually high.”
Gross makes the interesting point, that in the “New Normal,” of lower growth, with companies transforming into low-growth utilities-like businesses, rather than looking like Boardwalk and Park Place, why not simply opt for the utilities? Buffett, for example, has taken down all of Burlington Northern.
In a low growth environment, it seems to me that a company’s stock should yield more than its less risky debt, and many utilities provide just that opportunity. Utilities and even quasi-utility telecommunication companies now yield between 5 and 6%, whereas their 10- and 30-year bond yield less and at a higher tax rate to you the investor.
Read the whole letter here, download the PDF here.
Tags: Archangels, Battalion Commander, Bill Gross, Doughboys, Formative Stages, Foxhole, Global Currencies, Global Equity Markets, Gold, Gross Co, Gross Investment, Interest Rate Policy, Investment Outlook, Lehman Brothers, Maginot Line, Money Market Instruments, oil, PIMCO, Risk Spectrum, Systemic Risk, Will Rogers, Zero Percent
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