The debate in the market between inflationists (majority) and deflationists (minority) continues to complicate investors' ability to make decisions about where to deploy funds.
During the course of the year, inflationists benefited from the tailwind provided by the declining value of the dollar. The rally in risk assets came thanks to Bernanke's deflation-busting policy, and, ironically, therefore, as long as the news remained dire on GDP growth and unemployment, we could count on interest rates to remain around zero percent, and the dollar to continue lower as faithless investors ditched it.
For nine months, the dollar declined as the market put risk back "on." At the very beginning of the rally, in March 2009, the market's mood was very dark. The genesis of the rally was the short covering of bank stocks and financials, and the full scale launch of the dollar funded carry trade, mostly taking place in institutional and hedge fund trading rooms. Except for the wiliest, it most certainly was not driven by retail investors. The retail investor is usually late to the party once fear of missing opportunities sets in.
The rally in the dollar as of late November has confused the inflationist view as the tailwinds appear to have reversed. This has been, and remains a difficult time to make risk-based investment decisions.
by Pierre Daillie (AdvisorAnalyst.com), GlobeAdvisor.com, January 31, 2010.
http://www.globeadvisor.com/advisoranalyst/aa20100131.html