Bonds & Interest Rates
That interest rates are rising, and set to rise for years to come, should be no surprise to you.
Nor are they difficult to forecast. After all, the granddaddy interest rate cycle of 64 years in duration, which I’ve tracked back thousands of years in economic history, bottomed in June 2012, just as I said it would.
Rates have risen steadily since then. When the next peak in interest rates comes, on the half cycle of 32 years, in 2044, interest rates will exceed the highs of 1980, at 20 percent-plus.
That’s a long way off, and rates will climb pretty steadily the whole time, sometimes thrusting sharply higher, and sometimes pulling back or going sideways.
But there are two important “big picture” aspects of a rising interest rate environment that I want you to be aware of.
First, from a longer-term perspective, and for your investments. As I have discussed many times before, although the initial turn higher in rates is considered bearish for most asset classes, in reality, rising interest rates are bullish long term. All great bull markets in stocks, commodities and, yes, even real estate, occur during rising interest rate environments.
In other words, as far as the markets go, and with a longer-term view, do not fear rising interest rates. Gold, stocks and real estate prices will all rise together in the years ahead, with rising interest rates.
Second, from a short-term perspective, regarding your personal finances, take appropriate steps now, while rates are still extremely low on a historical basis.
A. If you haven’t already done so, refinance any property mortgages you have and do so on a 30-year fixed rate. I recommended that in the summer of 2012, when rates were at all-time lows, and if you acted on my advice, you are sitting pretty.
Nevertheless, if you have not refinanced, refinance now!
B. If you are not a homeowner yet, buy your home as soon as possible. Same reason: Mortgage rates are headed higher for some time to come. Opt for a 15- or 30-year fixed mortgage.
If you are looking to buy or own your business’ commercial building, do the same.
C. Importantly, stay away from revolving debt loans for consumer goods, etc. Those rates are already usurious, and they are going to go even higher.
Ditto for credit cards. Pay off as much credit card debt as you can, and stay out of debt on your credit cards. That way, instead of paying those usurious rates, you will be able to save the money and invest it in instruments that will offer you a rising rate of return via rising rates.
Lastly, be sure to keep abreast of my colleague, Mike Larson, and his work on interest rates. He’s on top of the many different profit opportunities that are available from a rising interest rate environment.
Best wishes,
Larry
The investment strategy and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author’s and do not necessarily reflect those of any other editor at Weiss Research or the company as a whole.
“Products are paid for with products,” said French economist and free-trade proponent Jean-Baptiste Say.
He meant that if you want to get something, you better have something you can trade for it.
What would Say make of the latest US GDP report?
Last week brought two important pieces of news: one deceptive, the other fraudulent.
The deceptive news was that the Fed, in its last Ben Bernanke moment, would stay the course. The course in question is the “12-Step Counterfeiters Anonymous” program popularly known as “tapering” of QE.
The Fed says it will stay on the program, leading investors to believe that the central bank’s PhDs were steadfast in their commitment to end their bond buying… and that the economy was healthy enough that it didn’t need QE to prop it up.
Neither of those things is true.
The fraudulent news was that US economy grew at a 3.2% annualized pace in the last quarter of 2013.
We’re still in the weakest recovery since the end of World War II. But since 1950, the composition of the US economy has changed so substantially that GDP ‘growth’ no longer means what it used to mean.
“Disappointing numbers on jobs and housing also raise concerns about whether the economy is accelerating,” reports the Wall Street Journal.
Wait. Jobs and housing are fairly important. If the news from those quarters is disappointing, what’s really up with the economy?
The explanation: “A big driver of growth in the fourth quarter was consumer spending, which grew 3.3%.”
The Journal quotes Bill Simon, Wal-Mart’s USA CEO: “I never cease to be amazed at the American consumers. They figure out a way to make it work…”
We are not so much amazed as appalled. And we are not so much reassured at this recovery, however weak, as we are alarmed by it.
Where did consumers get the money?
They didn’t earn it. So, they had to run down their balance sheets, either by spending their savings… or taking on debt.
That makes this a new kind of growth: The more you grow the poorer you get.
The economy used to grow by making people wealthier. Now, consumers go further into debt, while their incomes are stagnant or falling.
In 1980, a $7 trillion economy included $2 trillion of what City economist and author of Life After Growth Tim Morgan calls “globally marketable output” (GMO) – real wealth, the kind of stuff you can sell to pay your bills.
But then the economy underwent plastic surgery at the hands of quack policy makers. Now, it’s unrecognizable.
Today, we have a $16 trillion economy. But how much of that is from GMO? Well, about $13 trillion is consumer spending. And various statistical adjustments. Only $3 trillion is what Morgan calls GMO.
That’s the real growth of the US economy since 1980 – a piddly, pathetic $33 billion a year. Barely enough to keep up with population increases.
Growth? Forget it.
Regards,
Bill
S&P 500 Is Trapped
in ‘No Man’s Land’
From the desk of Chris Hunter, Editor-in-Chief, Bonner & Partners
Are US stocks reflecting the feds’ phony growth figures… or the real growth rate of Morgan’s “globally marketable output”?

Doubts are certainly creeping into the market…
This chart shows six-month price action for the S&P 500 plotted against its 50-day and 200-day simple moving averages (blue and red lines).
Moving averages help investors determine recent price trends… and levels of support and resistance… by smoothing out statistical “noise” from price fluctuations.
Shorter-term moving averages, such as the 50-day moving average, look at shorter-term price momentum.
Long-term investors tend to pay particular attention to longer moving averages, because they highlight longer-term price trends. The 200-day moving average, for instance, is widely seen as the “line in the sand” between a bull and a bear market.
As you can see from the chart above, the recent selloff has done considerable technical damage to the S&P 500. The index has broken below support at its 50-day moving average for the first time since last October.
But the index is still well above support at its 200-day moving average. And both moving averages are still trending upward.
Last week saw plenty of sideways action (yellow shaded area on the chart above), but no discernible trend either up or down.
This is “no man’s land” for the S&P 500.
If this sideways action gives way… and the index breaks lower… the next big level of support is at the 200-day moving average.
The bulls will be looking for the index to climb back above its 50-day moving average and resume its uptrend.
Which way the index breaks from its sideways trading will determine the market’s next big move.
The dollar fell to a two-month low against the safe-haven yen on Monday on persistent jitters over troubles in emerging markets and as surprisingly weak domestic manufacturing data spurred worries about U.S. economic growth.
The latest omen about slowing U.S. growth raised bets the Federal Reserve might refrain from a further reduction in its bond purchase stimulus, analysts said.
The U.S. central bank last week voted to reduce its monthly purchases of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities by $10 billion to $65 billion, following a $10 billion reduction in December.
“Markets were keyed for a strong manufacturing report, and they got slammed, and the dollar along with them, as January’s ISM survey at 51.3 showed this leading sector far weaker than expected,” said Joseph Trevisani, chief market strategist at WorldWideMarkets Online Trading in Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey.
The Institute for Supply Management on Monday said its index of U.S. factory activity fell to 51.3 last month, the lowest level since last May, from a recently revised 56.5 in December. The most alarming aspect of the report was the new orders component, which recorded the largest monthly drop in 33 years.
Wall Street stocks also sold off on the data. The dollar shed 0.9 percent against the yen to 101.07 yen, which was its lowest level since late November. .N
Against a basket of major currencies, including the yen, the dollar lost 0.2 percent at 81.103, wiping out Friday’s gain.
The euro, in reaction to the disappointing U.S. factory data, recovered from a two-month low against the greenback. The single currency earlier fell against the dollar as expectations grew that the European Central Bank might make an aggressive to combat deflation when it meets on Thursday. <ECB/PDF>
With the ECB’s main interest rate already at a record low 0.25 percent, some analysts expect the central bank will start buying sovereign bonds to loosen monetary conditions — similar to the Fed’s quantitative easing program — to avert a downward price spiral that could cripple an economy for years.
“What really matters is deflation,” said Hans Redeker, head of global currency strategy at Morgan Stanley in London. “The euro is going to find it very difficult to hold its value.”
On Friday, data showed a surprise drop in euro zone inflation for January to 0.7 percent year-on-year. Analysts had expected prices to rise 0.9 percent.
Earlier, the euro fell against the dollar on speculation about ECB action, hitting its weakest level against the greenback since late November before rebounding. It last traded up 0.2 percent at $1.3514.
Against the yen, the single euro zone currency held near a two-month trough at 136.80 yen, and it dropped to its lowest level against the Swiss franc in more than six weeks, at 1.2189 franc.
Ending Long S&P Stretch Without a 5% Slide
U.S. stocks fell, ending the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index’s longest stretch without a 5 percent slide since 2006, as a gauge of manufacturing in the world’s largest economy declined more than estimated.
Telephone stocks plunged after AT&T Inc. introduced new service plans, the latest in an escalating price war among wireless carriers. Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Co. fell at least 2.2 percent after reporting declines in January auto sales that were greater than analysts had estimated. Jos. A. Bank Clothiers Inc. slid 3.7 percent after management told Men’s Wearhouse Inc. it will not enter takeover talks. Pfizer Inc. rose 2 percent after saying a treatment for women with advanced breast cancer showed “positive” results in a trial.
The S&P 500 fell 1.8 percent to 1,751.45 at 1:16 p.m. in New York, poised for the lowest close since Nov. 8. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 234.02 points, or 1.5 percent, to 15,464.83. The gauge has fallen 6.7 percent this year to the lowest since October. Trading in S&P 500 stocks was 48 percent above the 30-day averaging during this time of the day.
“Everyone walked in this year expecting a continuation of at least growing economic activity and the latest data we’ve been seeing throw a bit of cold water on that theory,” Bill Schultz, chief investment officer who oversees about $1.1 billion at McQueen Ball & Associates in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, said by phone. “Economic activity was not as strong as people expected. People are taking a pause, reassessing where they stand.”
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