Bonds & Interest Rates

Inflation: Washington is Blind to Main Street’s Biggest Concern

inflation

Journalists, politicians and economists all seem to agree that the biggest economic issue currently worrying voters is unemployment. It follows then that most believe that the deciding factor in the presidential race will be the ability of each candidate to convince the public that his policies will create jobs. It seems that everyone got this memo…except the voters.

According to the results of a Fox News poll released last week (a random telephone sample of more than 1,200 registered voters) 41 % identified “inflation” as “the biggest economic problem they faced.” This is nearly double the 24% that named “unemployment” as their chief concern. For further comparison, 19% identified “taxes” and 7% “the housing market” as their primary concern. A full 44% of women, who often do more of the household shopping and would therefore be more sensitive to prices changes, identified rising prices as their primary concern.

My most recent video blog addresses this topic in detail.

While these statistics do not surprise me, they should shock the hell out of the establishment.  According to the Federal Reserve, inflation is not a concern at all.  Time after time, in front of Congress and the press, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke has said that inflation is contained and that it is below the Fed’s “mandated” rate of inflation (whatever that may be). The Bureau of Labor Statistics is saying the same thing. The measures they use to monitor inflation, such as the Consumer Price Index (CPI) and the Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE), show annual inflation well below 2%.  In fact, the GDP price deflator used by the Commerce Department to calculate the second quarter’s 1.3% annual growth rate assumed annual inflation was running at just 1.6%.

In fact, Bernanke thinks inflation is so low that he is actually worried about deflation, which he believes is a more dangerous issue. As a result, he is recommending policies that look to raise the inflation rate, not just to combat the phantom menace of deflation but to boost the housing market and reduce unemployment. He mistakenly believes these problems are the ones that concern Americans the most.

If inflation really is as subdued as the government claims, how is it that so many people are concerned?  It’s not as if the media or political candidates are fanning the fears of rising prices. In fact, given the media’s preoccupation with the housing market, the fact that nearly seven times as many Americans worry more about rising food prices than falling home prices shows just how large the inflation problem must be. Yet most economic observers continue to swallow the government’s inflation propaganda hook, line and sinker.  In fact, although the Fox poll came out last week, I did not read or hear a single story on this topic, even from Fox news itself, which appears to not have noticed the significance of its own data.

For years my critics have always attempted to discredit my inflation fears by pointing to government statistics showing low rates. However, I have long maintained that such statistics underreport inflation, and the results of this poll seem to confirm my suspicion. There are only two possible ways to explain the disconnect. Either the government is correct and consumers are worried about a non-existent problem, or the consumers’ concerns are real and the government’s statistics are not. From my perspective, it seems that it is far more likely that consumers are in the right.  If so, we are in a lot of trouble.

If annual inflation is actually higher than 3%, which would certainly be the case if consumers are so worried about it, then we are already in recession. Had government used a 3% inflation deflator (rather than the 1.6% that they actually used) to calculate 2nd quarter GDP, then growth would have been reported at negative .1% rather than the positive 1.3%.  I believe that if the government used more accurate inflation data over the past several years, it is possible that we would have seen no statistical recovery from the recession that began in the fourth quarter of 2007. This would help explain why the “recovery” has failed to create jobs or lift personal incomes.

The Fed’s zero percent interest rate policy is predicated on the assumption that there is currently no inflation. If this is not accurate, then they are making a major policy mistake. The Fed is easing when it should be tightening. If inflation is such a major concern now, imagine how much bigger the problem will become once the Fed achieves its goal of pushing the rate higher. More importantly, how much tighter will future monetary policy have to be to put the inflation genie back in her bottle? If inflation becomes so virulent before the Fed realizes its mistake, then it may be forced to raise interest rates significantly. U.S. national debt is projected to reach $20 trillion within a few years. As a result, a 10% interest rate (which would be needed to combat 1970’s style inflation) will require the U.S. government to pay about $2 trillion per year in interest on the national debt. This will absolutely upend all economic projections.

Since 10% interest rates will likely crush the economy, not to mention the banks and the real estate market, tax revenues will plunge and non-interest government expenditures will go through the roof. Assuming we try to borrow the difference, annual budget deficits could go much, much higher from the already ridiculously high levels that they have reached during President Obama’s term. Annual deficits of $2 trillion, $3 trillion, or even $4 trillion, would result in a sovereign debt crisis that would force the Federal Government to either default on its obligations or inflate them away.  Given the tendency for politicians to prefer the latter, voters who think rising prices are a problem now should just wait until they see what is waiting down the road!


Peter Schiff’s new book, The Real Crash: America’s Coming Bankruptcy – How to Save Yourself and Your Country is now available. Order your copy today

For in-depth analysis of this and other investment topics, subscribe to Peter Schiff’s Global Investor newsletter. CLICK HERE for your free subscription. 

Silver & Signs of an Outright “Comex Default”

Precious metals are correcting and rumors are swirling around Comex silver.  It’s been an interesting couple of days for silver, with a big Comex draw-down being followed by a sizable price drop.

“Late Friday afternoon a big client of JP Morgan requested delivery of 3.6 million ounces, which is 17% of all the registered inventory of silver (assuming it’s all really there). But only 1.6 million ounces were reported moved. A lot of people are asking where the rest of it is. If it wasn’t immediately available and the client allowed JP Morgan to move it in pieces, that’s another sign of very tight supply”.

“There is 100 times as much silver paper [in the form of futures contracts] as there is physical, which means a lot more people think they own silver than there is silver in the world. At some point someone will be left out. If 17% of Comex inventory is taken out in one move, then you don’t need that many more big players to take delivery to see this thing fall apart.”

…..read the whole How To Play a Comex Default  HERE

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On Guard: Cycles Show 6-12 Weeks of Either Trouble or Opportunity

Stock Market Trend & Cycles Show 6-12 Weeks of Weakness, plus US Dollar, Crude Oil, Natural Gas, Gold, Gold Miners, Silver and Bonds all carefully reviewed.

Click anywhere on Chart to or HERE to start the review:

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Boom Bust Cycles – Hot Sectors & Easy Money

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perspectives commentary

PEOPLE BUY WHAT THEY KNOW

You can analyze any stock with a ruler, learn this lesson plus get my weekly market analysis in the Market Minutes video. You can watch this week’s video on Youtube by clicking here. To receive email alerts any time I upload a new video, subscribe to the Stockscores channel at www.youtube.com/stockscoresdotcom.

Here is an excerpt from my upcoming book, The Mindless Investor, How to Make Money in the Market by Overcoming Your Common Sense. This piece is from the chapter, Avoid Being Yourself.

Trading can be a bit boring. You’ll spend a lot of time waiting for a new trading opportunity to come along or for an existing trade to develop. I’m not complaining-trading can be very exciting as well-but it’s nice to get out from behind my screens once in a while. Speaking about trading the markets at investor conferences is a good change of pace for me and something I do a few times a year.

While I’m at these conferences to teach the audience about trading, I also learn a lot by talking to investors. Since I do presentations in many different places, I have started to see patterns in how people approach the markets. These patterns shed light on some of the reasons why many investors have trouble beating the market.

People Buy What They Know

People tend to buy what they and their social network know. The main industries of a region are often the focus for investors in that area. Vancouver, Canada, is a centre for mining exploration companies, a focus that evolved out of the Vancouver Stock Exchange’s function as a hub for raising money for speculative mining deals. Some of the world’s biggest mining investment shows are held in Vancouver, so it’s not surprising that when I do a presentation in Vancouver the questions I’m asked are almost entirely about mining stocks.

Take a one-hour flight east to Calgary, Canada, and the questions now focus on oil and gas stocks. Calgary is Canada’s epicentre of the energy industry; the tall glass towers that make this city’s skyline so dramatic are home to many energy company head offices.

You won’t find the people in Vancouver and Calgary to be a whole lot different: they speak with the same Canadian accent and are as polite as Canadians are reputed to be. Both cities are wealthy by global standards, and the population of each tends to be more educated than most. Both cities love their respective hockey teams and have hosted successful Winter Olympics: Calgary in 1988 and Vancouver in 2010.

But despite so many similarities, they have a very different focus in their investment approaches. I have met countless Vancouverites and Calgarians who have shown me their portfolios, and it’s not uncommon to find that they’re 100% invested in the native industry of their city. Most portfolio managers would be shocked to see a person’s entire retirement portfolio invested in speculative mining or energy stocks, yet this is not uncommon in these cities. I once met a guy in Vancouver who had shares in over 100 mining stocks and not a single stock outside of that sector.

This lack of diversity can create great fortunes when there’s a boom in that industry. I’ve seen it happen many times. The mining industry enjoyed great success over a number of years as the prices of gold and silver surged to record highs from 2006-2011. I expect that the Mercedes and BMW dealerships enjoyed a lucrative business in Vancouver during those years, funded by penny stock profits.

Mining and energy tend to run in boom-bust cycles making long-term success fleeting. When a sector is hot, it’s easy to make money. When it ceases to be the trendy place to invest, these stocks can languish for years with negative returns. During these times, sector-weighted investors struggle through financial and emotional turmoil, watching seven- and eight-figure portfolios shrink to five- or six-figure amounts. I know people who have gone from a net worth of over $20 million to under $1 million in the span of a year when the sector they were invested in went from hot to not. These sorts of trend reversals flood the market with slightly used Mercedeses and BMWs.

In a hot market, everyone’s an expert. A person who knows a little bit about oil and gas, enough to pick a few stocks with some decent potential, can make a lot of money. These people don’t make money because they have exceptional analytical prowess, but simply because they rode a hot market. When the trend reverses, they go back to looking like neophytes. Even the most knowledgeable of sector investors look dumb when the trend is down. Profits in these markets are just short-term loans for the person who fails to realize that you have to sell and move on to the next hot market.

perspectives strategy

This week, I thought I would share a few stocks that Stockscores users have highlighted for me. These are from emails that I received today.

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1. T.PMT
A very nice Bottom Fishing chart set up, the stock broke its downward trend early this year and has been building a rising bottom over the past few months. It is now starting to break through resistance from an optimistic ascending triangle chart pattern. Support at $1.22.

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2. TTWO
TTWO is building optimism and starting to move through resistance. The recent price volatility makes it more likely that the stock will pull back as it is a sign that investors are somewhat uncertain about the stock but also eager to buy. Support at $10.30.

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I hope those of you near Vancouver or Calgary will join Michael Campbell, host of MoneyTalks, and I for an evening discussion of the market and how I approach it. For those who are not familiar with MoneyTalks, it is an excellent financial radio show that is broadcast in most markets in Canada. If it is not broadcast in your city it is available for free download from iTunes as a podcast.

I plan to highlight some of the lessons from my new book, The Mindless Investor. This book is not yet available (it is being printed right now) and those who attend this event will be the first to receive one of the first 1000 copies of the book. Attendees will also receive:

– Attendance at the event
– Two months of my daily newsletter (value $118, new subscribers only)
– One month access to Stockscores.com (value $29, new subscribers only)

Some of the important lessons from my book:

– You must think like a trader to invest in the stock market today
– Diversification is a dangerous way to manage risk
– The stock market is not fair
– You can analyze any stock or market in 10 seconds (I will show you how)

Past MoneyTalks events have been sell outs and we expect this one to be no different, don’t wait too long to purchase tickets.

For more information, click on the appropriate link below:

Evening with Michael Campbell and Tyler Bollhorn, Calgary Oct 29 and Vancouver Oct 30

To get 20% off of the ticket price, use the special offer code SSTB2013 at checkout.

References

  • Get the Stockscore on any of over 20,000 North American stocks.
  • Background on the theories used by Stockscores.
  • Strategies that can help you find new opportunities.
  • Scan the market using extensive filter criteria.
  • Build a portfolio of stocks and view a slide show of their charts.
  • See which sectors are leading the market, and their components.

    Disclaimer
    This is not an investment advisory, and should not be used to make investment decisions. Information in Stockscores Perspectives is often opinionated and should be considered for information purposes only. No stock exchange anywhere has approved or disapproved of the information contained herein. There is no express or implied solicitation to buy or sell securities. The writers and editors of Perspectives may have positions in the stocks discussed above and may trade in the stocks mentioned. Don’t consider buying or selling any stock without conducting your own due diligence.

 

 

 

George Soros: Germany must act to solve “nightmare”

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There is a real danger that the “nightmare” euro crisis could destroy the European Union and Germany should either step up to fix it or step out of the currency union altogether, fund manager George Soros said on Monday.

The crisis “is having tremendous impact in the state of affairs, it is pushing the EU into a lasting depression, and it is entirely self-created,” said Soros, Chairman of Soros Fund Management.

“There is a real danger of the euro destroying the European Union. The way to escape it is for Germany to accept … greater commitment to helping not only its interests but the interests of the debtor countries, and playing the role of the benevolent hegemon,” he said at a luncheon hosted by the National Association for Business Economics

Germany should act as the leader of the union such as the United States was for the free world after the Second World War, Soros said.

The influential fund manager floated another solution to the crisis that has gone on for more than two years: Germany could leave the euro, “and the problem would disappear in thin air,” as the value of the euro declines and yields on the bonds of debtor countries adjust.

The notion that governments are “riskless” is the main false assumption underlying the euro zone, Soros said, adding it could be corrected by introducing Eurobonds.

“But that has become politically unacceptable by Germany,” he added.