As the debate rages on about whether the U.S. economy is
headed for a double-dip, we believe another recession is all but guaranteed, and
there is nothing that can be done to prevent it. Many American politicians have
been following the Nelson tenet of above. The only difference is that good old
Horatio had a solution whereas Bernanke and Obama do not - apart from sticking
their heads in the sand and kissing their backsides goodbye.
The bond market, which is the most reliable indicator, has
been pointing to a slowdown since at least April or May. The de-leveraging
process facing the U.S. is so severe that a recession is inevitable.
If you have got a USD14.5 trillion debt burden, it is going
to be a pretty severe recession. Recession is usually linked to the size of the
debt a country has to clear up.
In fact, the U.S. economy has been in trouble far longer than
most people appreciate and has been merely using debt to prop up growth.
The U.S. was borrowing somewhere north of USD500 billion a
year to create GDP growth of a little less than USD500 million a year. The U.S.
has been at stall-speed for the past ten years.
When GDP growth is less than the increase in national debt
every year, it just does not make sense to go on like that. To us, that is not
real growth; it is just papering over the cracks which are getting bigger all
the time and may end up looking like the San Andreas Fault. It is hiding over
the fact that maybe we are already in a serious recession where growth is
impacted by the sheer amount of debt that is actually out there.
Here at MBMG, we have been taking advantage of the rally in
the Treasury market over the past few months, but that party might end soon
because a recession would hurt the government’s ability to raise revenues.
Once we get into that environment, at that point, you
probably do not want to be holding Treasuries anymore because there is a huge
amount of pressure coming down on the credit rating, not just from the growth
slowdown or the move into recession, but the move into deflation.
Instead, we are holding forty five percent in cash in some of
our most defensive portfolios and we have also been moving money into the
Singapore Dollar and Asian government bonds.
What we are trying to do there is not only preserve capital,
but to take advantage of other opportunities with cash. For instance, the
Singapore Dollar has been a theme we are interested in, and some short term
emerging market bonds. If you look at some of the shorter dated Indonesian
bonds, we have had a kick-up from the rupiah doing ok, but also there is some
yield from those instruments. Above all, please remember my old mantra of
staying liquid.
|
The above data and research was compiled from sources
believed to be reliable. However, neither MBMG International Ltd nor its
officers can accept any liability for any errors or omissions in the
above article nor bear any responsibility for any losses achieved as a
result of any actions taken or not taken as a consequence of reading the
above article. For more information please contact Graham Macdonald on
[email protected] |