The Crucial Question You Must Ask Now + Marc Faber’s Advice on How to Play This Situation

Posted by Marc Faber

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The Key Points:

“The crucial question over the next decade is not “where will my returns be highest?” but “where will I lose the least money?. The inevitable crash, or “rebooting the computer,” will simply have to be endured. He advises how investors should play this situation:

Equity-like corporate bonds – 25% of a portfolio. Another 25% made up of stocks, especially in emerging markets, with a further 25% in precious metals (which tend to be severely underweighted in a typical pension fund). Real estate in certain areas (such as Asia) for the remainder. He added that US house prices are looking decidedly cheap and that an investment in remote farmland could pay off, as growing social tensions could make urban life intolerable.

Marc Faber: Continuing Financial Crisis Must Be Endured – (The Entire Article)

Marc Faber, editor of “The Gloom, Boom and Doom Report,” kicked off the CFA Institute  Middle East Investment Conference by quoting Ernest Hemingway who said, “The first panacea for a mismanaged nation is inflation of the currency; the second is war. Both bring a temporary prosperity; both bring permanent ruin.” On this downcast note, Faber attacked short-term Keynesian spending and reviewed the implications for investors of the accelerating shift of world economic and political power from the developed countries to the developing world.

Central bank action to cut interest rates, whilst intended to boost consumption and hence economic growth, has had unintended and severely negative consequences. Faber argued that “dollar bills dumped by helicopters” all over the US have not been channelled into housing, as hoped, but into other more speculative asset classes, particularly commodities such as precious metals and oil. He added that expansionist monetary policies have contributed to higher financial and economic volatility, in addition to inflation. Since greater money supply does not flow evenly across sectors, this gives rise to asset bubbles, which are not easy to identify.

For Faber, at the start of any bubble, “promoters have the vision, and investors have the money.” But the reverse occurs as the bubble bursts: the promoters end up with the money, while most people lose out. Current negative real interest rates, which make cash a safe, but poorly-returning investment, penalize savers, and encourage them to speculate.  But Faber asked, “Is deflation such a bad thing?”  During deflationary periods in the nineteenth century, real per capita income apparently increased faster than it does now.

Faber also noted that excessive debt always contributes to risk. For example highly leveraged US developers became insolvent when the housing bubble burst, in contrast to their more conservative Hong Kong counterparts who managed to remain solvent. Borrowing has increased just to maintain a standard of living.  In 1980, US debt/GDP stood at 140%.  Now it is approaching 400%, if unfunded liabilities such as social security and Medicare are taken into account.  As a result, adjusted US government debt now exceeds $15 trillion, and continues to rise.  US spending is up, but taxes are down. Faber contended that the vast majority of tax revenue goes to mandatory expenditures such as medical care, social security and interest expense rather than to capital formation.  Given these imbalances Faber is unsurprised that the quality of US government bonds has been called into question.

By slashing interest rates, governments have also contributed to higher commodity prices, especially oil prices, according to Faber.  Any intended boost to consumption is undone by higher energy prices which act as an additional tax on the consumer.

Adding that the G7’s exports continue to decline, Faber contrasted this with climbing developing world exports, resulting in rapidly growing reserves among emerging economies.  These reserves will be spent on scarce resources such as precious metals and other commodities.  Faber believes that oil demand among the emerging economies now exceeds that of the developed world.  China is increasingly absorbing the world’s resources to feed its growth.  It is positioning itself carefully as a global economic and political power, assiduously dominating shipping lanes, forging alliances with neighboring states, and investing heavily, so much so that Faber argues China has now got its own domestic credit bubble.  Faber sees parallel scenarios being played out in India, Southeast Asia and Latin America. The growing economic power of these nations will inevitably lead to further geopolitical tensions where the MENA region is a potential powder keg.

So how should investors play this situation?  Faber states that diversification is key alongside low leverage.  His recommendations are as follows: cash and bonds are not hugely attractive, given negative real interest rates, but equity-like corporate bonds could form 25% of a portfolio.  Another 25% could be made up of stocks, especially in emerging markets, with a further 25% in precious metals (which tend to be severely underweighted in a typical pension fund).  Real estate in certain areas (such as Asia) could make up the remainder.  He added that US house prices are looking decidedly cheap.

Faber closed his speech by emphasizing that the crucial question over the next decade is not “where will my returns be highest?” but “where will I lose the least money?” In fact, he believes that losses of 50% should be considered as a relative success. He advised that an investment in remote farmland could pay off, as growing social tensions could make urban life intolerable. In his view the welfare state has evolved from the many helping the few to the few helping the many and that the inevitable crash, or “rebooting the computer,” will simply have to be endured. Whether this crisis occurs soon, as further credit expansion is voluntarily abandoned, or occurs later, as the currency system meets final and total catastrophe, Faber cannot predict.