Prechter Predicts Dow Under 1,000
|
But first . . . CARS
FLY! Steve
Gilbert:
“The beauty of the flying car is
that it isn’t illegal to talk on the phone or text while flying.
Plus, it will have a small effect on overpopulation, what with the constant
horrible crashes. TV news will love them.” hubble
humbles! Theo
Kent:
“Thank you for the site with the
slide show of the universe. I don’t know whether to cry or just sit
in stunned silence. I’ve thought of the things this person reveals
many, many times – and now have the ‘visual aids’ to display
the thoughts.” ATLANTA
RULES! Its city council yesterday became the twenty-first to pass a
resolution endorsing the Uniting American Families Act. UAFA would allow
LGBT citizens to sponsor their foreign partners for “green cards” to
live here with them. Twenty other leading Western democracies already have something like this on their books
– including every English-speaking country except (of course) the United
States. HAWAII
SUCKS! Well, not Hawaii – I’m crazy about Hawaii
– but her Republican governor, Linda Lingle, who yesterday announced
she would veto the civil unions bill passed by the legislature. Will she
next attempt a ban on gay vacationers? And now . . . RUN
FOR THE HILLS! Kathryn
Lance:
“Scary article
in the Times. Can you please comment on this in
a column soon?” ☞
Robert Prechter is often wrong (as am I), but the article is worth reading (executive summary: 1929
was a cakewalk compared with what we may be in for)
and I have long advocated the notion that those of us fortunate enough to have
assets to protect should adopt a “four-prong strategy”
– some liquid assets, an inflation hedge, a deflation
hedge, and a “prosperity” hedge (in case things should
go right). Cash
in the bank is always a good liquid asset – and FDIC insured now
up to $250,000 per account. For
most Americans, just paying off their credit cards and having this first prong covered with an ample cash cushion is a distant (but worthy) goal. For
those with more: Real
estate (like your own home, and/or someone else’s) – and shares in
companies that can raise prices – have been the inflation hedges
I’ve long suggested (with big caveats as the bubbles grew in both).
Last year I reluctantly added gold (for example, here).
Today, with GLD up 25% since then at $117 or so, I think it still makes sense
as an inflation hedge. My
deflation hedge
of choice (apart from cash, which becomes more valuable as prices decline) has
been long-term Treasury bonds. Yet with the likelihood of inflation
returning some day, lending Uncle Sam money for 30 years at 3.89% carries its own risks.
(So see: TIPS, below.) Yes, you would do exceptionally well if the yield
continued to drop to, say, 2%. But you would need to be nimble in exiting
as the yield eventually (or perhaps tomorrow) began heading back up. I
hope long-term Treasuries never again yield 15% as 30 years ago they did (let
alone more, as in a true meltdown they theoretically could). But if the
general level of interest rates zooms, the market value of long-term, bonds
paying 3.89% will be a small fraction of their $1,000 face value. Prosperity
hedges remain,
of course, shares in American and international businesses – though I
will admit my own guess is: more tough sledding ahead for many of them.
Will the stocks of most retailers, restaurant chains, and home builders come
roaring back? Well, some of them already have – a lot of stocks are
still double or triple or quintuple where they were at their depths. To
me, many of them embody more risk here than reward. I like to think we
may be able to tilt the odds a little in our favor (you know my feelings on
dredging, and some little drug stocks, and one preposterously speculative
long-shot whose name starts with a B and shall otherwise today go
unmocked). But stock picking is notoriously difficult, so index funds
continue to make sense – though there may be an edge in unweighted
index funds (like RSP) and an even greater edge in the Joel Greenblatt approach that I find
persuasive. One
way to combine the first three prongs is with recently-issued intermediate-term
TIPS. (“Recently-issued” so that, if we have deflation, you
are not paying for an accumulated inflation premium that will deflate back down
to the guaranteed $1,000 “par” value of the bond.) They will
not be a perfect hedge against everything (least of all, prosperity)
. . . and if we have inflation, Uncle Sam will tax you on the
inflation factor . . . but they’re still something to consider
for the portion of your assets you want to keep as safe as possible –
while swearing off all possibility of any meaningful gain. (Also
always worthwhile: a true disaster hedge, whether that disaster be
financial upheaval or hurricane, tornado, earthquake, or terrorism –
basically, ye trusty olde supply of nonperishables, like tuna fish and peanut
butter, aspirin and V8 juice, matches and so on – don’t forget a
can opener – that could come in handy if normal supply lines to your
community became disrupted for a week or three. I have those little
solar-and-crank powered radio/flashlights . . . and guess whose rooftop solar
photovoltaic panels now generate 3.6KW of electricity on a sunny day?
(They were installed last week and look great. They get hooked into the
grid this week or next, and my meter should start running backwards much
of the time. This is still an infant industry, but one to
“invest” in that might add more value to your home than a swimming
pool.) The
main thing to say about Prechter’s view is that the power of market tides
is different from the power of lunar ones. The lunar ones are
predictable and out of our control. The financial tides are vastly more
complex to predict – and actions we take do affect them. So
we’d be wise to take actions that prove Robert Prechter wrong. Which
is the subject I hope to touch on tomorrow.
© 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 Andrew Tobias