Dramatic Shifts In Investment Direction / Secular
Paradigms
One of my investment principles is:
Identify the paradigm you’re in, examine if and how it is
unsustainable, and visualize how the paradigm shift will
transpire when that which is unsustainable stops.
Investors
Grossly Underweight In Gold
Over my roughly 50 years of being a global macro investor, I
have observed there to be relatively long periods
(about 10 years) in which the markets and market
relationships operate in a certain way (which I call
“paradigms”) that most people adapt to and eventually
extrapolate so they become overdone, which leads to shifts
to new paradigms in which the markets operate more opposite
than similar to how they operated during the prior
paradigm. Identifying and tactically navigating these
paradigm shifts well (which we try to do via our Pure Alpha
moves) and/or structuring one’s portfolio so that one is
largely immune to them (which we try to do via our All
Weather portfolios) is critical to one’s success as an
investor. Top
Miner
How Paradigm Shifts Occur
There are always big unsustainable forces that drive the
paradigm. They go on long enough for people to believe that
they will never end even though they obviously must end. A
classic one of those is an unsustainable rate of debt growth
that supports the buying of investment assets; it drives
asset prices up, which leads people to believe that
borrowing and buying those investment assets is a good thing
to do. But it can’t go on forever because the entities
borrowing and buying those assets will run out of borrowing
capacity while the debt service costs rise relative to their
incomes by amounts that squeeze their cash flows. When these
things happen, there is a paradigm shift. Debtors get
squeezed and credit problems emerge, so there is a
retrenchment of lending and spending on goods, services, and
investment assets so they go down in a self-reinforcing
dynamic that looks more opposite than similar to the prior
paradigm. This continues until it’s also overdone, which
reverses in a certain way that I won’t digress into but is
explained in my book Principles
for Navigating Big Debt Crises.. Wall
Street Daily
Another classic example that comes to mind is that extended
periods of low volatility tend to lead to high volatility
because people adapt to that low volatility, which leads
them to do things (like borrow more money than they would
borrow if volatility was greater) that expose them to more
volatility, which prompts a self-reinforcing pickup in
volatility. There are many classic examples like this that
repeat over time that I won’t get into now. Still, I want to
emphasize that understanding which types of paradigms exist
and how they might shift is required to consistently invest
well. That is because any single approach to investing—e.g.,
investing in any asset class, investing via any investment
style (such as value, growth, distressed), investing in
anything—will experience a time when it performs so terribly
that it can ruin you. That includes investing in “cash”
(i.e., short-term debt) of the sovereign that can’t default,
which most everyone thinks is riskless but is not because
the cash returns provided to the owner are denominated in
currencies that the central bank can “print” so they can be
depreciated in value when enough money is printed to hold
interest rates significantly below inflation rates.
In paradigm shifts, most people get caught overextended
doing something overly popular and get really hurt. On the
other hand, if you’re astute enough to understand these
shifts, you can navigate them well or at least protect
yourself against them. The 2008-09 financial crisis, which
was the last major paradigm shift, was one such period. It
happened because debt growth rates were unsustainable in the
same way they were when the 1929-32 paradigm shift happened.
Because we studied such periods, we saw that we were headed
for another “one of those” because what was happening was
unsustainable, so we navigated the crisis well when most
investors struggled.
I think now is a good time 1) to look at past paradigms and
paradigm shifts and 2) to focus on the paradigm that we are
in and how it might shift because we are late in the current
one and likely approaching a shift. To do that, I wrote this
report with two parts: 1) “Paradigms and Paradigm Shifts
over the Last 100 Years” and 2) “The Coming Paradigm
Shift.” They are attached. If you have the time to read them
both, I suggest that you start with “Paradigms and Paradigm
Shifts over the Last 100 Years” because it will give you a
good understanding of them and it will give you the evolving
story that got us to where we are, which will help put where
we are into context. There is also an appendix with
longer descriptions of each of the decades from the 1920s to
the present for those who want to explore them in more
depth.
Part I: Paradigms and Paradigm Shifts over the Last 100
Years
History has taught us that there are always paradigms and
paradigm shifts and that understanding and positioning
oneself for them is essential for one’s well-being as an
investor and beyond. The purpose of this piece is to show
you market and economic paradigms and their shifts over the
past 100 years to convey how they work. In the accompanying
piece, “The Coming Paradigm Shift,” I explain my thinking
about the one that might be ahead.
Due to limitations in time and space, I will only focus on
those in the United States because they will suffice for
giving you the perspective I’d like to convey. However, at
some point I will show you them in all significant countries
in the same way I did for big debt crises in Principles
for Navigating Big Debt Crises because I believe that
understanding them all is essential for having a timeless
and universal understanding of how markets and economies
work.
How Paradigms and Paradigm Shifts Work
As you know, market pricing reflects expectations of the
future; as such, it paints quite detailed pictures of what
the consensus expectation of the future is. Then, the
markets move as a function of how events transpire relative
to those expectations. As a result, navigating markets well
requires one to be more accurate about what is going to
happen than the consensus view that is built into the
price. That’s the game. That’s why understanding these
paradigms and paradigm shifts is so important.
I have found that the consensus view is typically more
heavily influenced by what has happened relatively recently
(i.e., over the past few years) than it is by what is most
likely. It tends to assume that the paradigms that have
existed will persist and it fails to anticipate the paradigm
shifts, which is why we have such big market and economic
shifts. These shifts, more often than not, lead to markets
and economies behaving more opposite than similar to how
they behaved in the prior paradigm.
What follows is my description of the paradigms and paradigm
shifts in the US over the last 100 years. It includes a mix
of facts and subjective interpretations, because when faced
with the choice of sharing these subjective thoughts or
leaving them out, I felt it was better to include them along
with this warning label. Naturally, my degree of closeness
to these experiences affects the quality of my
descriptions. Since my direct experiences began in the early
1960s, my observations of the years since then are most
vivid. While less vivid, my understanding of markets and
economies going back to the 1920s is still pretty good both
because of my intense studying of it and because of my
talking with the people of my parents’ generation who
experienced it. As for times before the 1920s, my
understanding comes purely from studying just the big market
and economic moves, so it’s less good though not
nonexistent. Over the last year, I have been studying
economic and market moves in major countries going back to
about the year 1500, which has given me a superficial
understanding of them. With that perspective, I can say with
confidence that throughout the times I have studied the same
big things happen over and over again for essentially the
same reasons. I’m not saying they’re exactly the same or
that important changes haven’t occurred, because they
certainly have (e.g., how central banks have come and gone
and changed). What I am saying is that big paradigm shifts
have always happened and they happened for roughly the same
reasons.
To show them, I have divided history into decades, beginning
with the 1920s, because they align well enough with paradigm
shifts in order for me to convey the picture. Though not
always perfectly aligned, paradigm shifts have coincidently
tended to happen around decade shifts—e.g., the 1920s were
“roaring,” the 1930s were in “depression,” the 1970s were
inflationary, the 1980s were disinflationary, etc. Also, I
believe that looking at
10-year time horizons helps one put things in
perspective. It’s also a nice coincidence that we are in the
last months of this decade, so it’s an interesting exercise
to start imagining what the new ‘20s decade will be like,
which is my objective, rather than to focus in on what
exactly will happen in any one quarter or year.
Before briefly describing each of these decades, I want to
convey a few observations you should look out for when we
discuss each of them.
Every decade had its own distinctive characteristics,
though within all decades there were long-lasting
periods (e.g., 1 to 3 years) that had almost the exact
opposite characteristics of what typified the decade. To
successfully deal with these changes, one would have had
to successfully time the ins and outs, or faded the
moves (i.e., bought more when prices fell and sold more
when prices rose), or had a balanced portfolio that
would have held relatively steady through the moves. The
worst thing would have been to go with the moves (sell
after price declines and buy after price increases).
The big economic and market movements undulated in big
swings that were due to a sequence of actions and
reactions by policy makers, investors, business owners,
and workers. In the process of economic conditions and
market valuations growing overdone, the seeds of the
reversals germinated. For example, the same debt that
financed excesses in economic activity and market prices
created the obligations that could not be met, which
contributed to the declines. Similarly, the more extreme
economic conditions became, the more forceful policy
makers’ responses to reverse them became. For these
reasons, throughout these 10 decades we see big economic
and market swings around “equilibrium” levels. The
equilibriums I’m referring to are the three that I
provided in my template, which are:
1) Debt growth that is in line with the income growth that
is required to service debt;
2) The economy’s operating rate is neither too high (because
that will produce unacceptable inflation and inefficiencies)
nor too low (because economically depressed levels of
activity will produce unacceptable pain and political
changes); and
3) The projected returns of cash are below the projected
returns of bonds, which are below the projected returns of
equities and the projected returns of other “risky assets”
(because the failure of these spreads to exist will impede
the effective growth of credit and other forms of capital,
which will cause the economy to slow down or go in reverse,
while wide spreads will cause it to accelerate).
At the end of each decade, most investors expected the
next decade to be similar to the prior decade, but
because of the previously described process of excesses
leading to excesses and undulations, the subsequent
decades were more opposite than similar to the ones that
preceded them. As a result, market movements due to
these paradigm shifts typically were very large and
unexpected and caused great shifts in wealth.
Every major asset class had great and terrible decades,
so much so that any investor who had most of their
wealth concentrated in any one investment would have
lost almost all of it at one time or another.
Theories about how to invest changed frequently, usually
to explain how the past few years made sense even when
it didn’t make sense. These backward-looking theories
typically were strongest at the end of the paradigm
period and proved to be terrible guides for investing in
the next decade, so they were very damaging. That is why
it is so important to see the full range of past
paradigms and paradigm shifts and to structure one’s
investment approach so that it would have worked well
through them all. The worst thing one can do, especially
late in a paradigm, is to build one’s portfolio based on
what would have worked well over the prior 10 years, yet
that’s typical.
It is for these reasons that we invest the way we do—i.e.,
it’s why we built a balanced All Weather portfolio designed
to hold relatively stable though the big undulations by
being well-diversified and built a Pure Alpha portfolio to
make tactical timing moves.
Below, I have summarized the picture of the dynamics for
each decade with a very brief description and with a few
tables that show asset class returns, interest rates, and
economic activity for each decade over the last
nine. Through these tables, you can get a feel of the
dynamics for each decade, which I then address in more
detail and show the market movements in the appendix to this
report.
1920s = “Roaring”: From Boom to Bursting Bubble. It started
with a recession and the markets discounting negative growth
as stock yields were significantly above bond yields, yet
there was fast positive growth funded by an acceleration in
debt during the decade, so stocks did extremely well. By the
end of the decade, the markets discounted fast growth and
ended with a classic bubble (i.e., with debt-financed
purchases of stocks and other assets at high prices) that
burst in 1929, the last year of the decade.
1930s = Depression. This decade was for the most part the
opposite of the 1920s. It started with the bursting
reactions to high levels of indebtedness and the markets
discounting relatively high growth rates. This debt crisis
and plunge in economic activity led to economic depression,
which led to aggressive easing by the Fed that consisted of
breaking the link to gold, interest rates hitting 0%, the
printing of a lot of money, and the devaluing of the dollar,
which was accompanied by rises in gold prices, stock prices,
and commodity prices from 1932 to 1937. Because the monetary
policy caused asset prices to rise and because compensation
didn’t keep up, the wealth gap widened, a conflict between
socialists and capitalists emerged, and there was the rise
of populism and nationalism globally. In 1937, the Fed and
fiscal policies were tightened a bit and the stock market
and economy plunged. Simultaneously, the geopolitical
conflicts between the emerging Axis countries of Germany,
Italy, and Japan and the established Allied countries of the
UK, France, and China intensified, which eventually led to
all-out war in Europe in 1939 and the US beginning a war in
Asia in 1941. For the decade as a whole, stocks performed
badly, and a debt crisis occurred early, which was largely
handled via defaults, guarantees, and monetization of debts
along with a lot of fiscal stimulation. For a detailed
account of this period, see pages 49-95 in Part Two of Principles
for Navigating Big Debt Crises.
1940s = War and Post-War. The economy and markets were
classically war-driven. Governments around the world both
borrowed heavily and printed significant amounts of money,
stimulating both private-sector employment in support of the
war effort and military employment. While production was
strong, much of what was produced was used and destroyed in
the war, so classic measures of growth and unemployment are
misleading. Still, this war-effort production pulled the US
out of the post-Great Depression slump. Monetary policy was
kept very easy to accommodate the borrowing and the paying
back of debts in the post-war period. Specifically, monetary
policy remained stimulative, with interest rates held down
and fiscal policy liberally producing large budget deficits
during the war and then after the war to promote
reconstruction abroad (the Marshall Plan). As a result,
stocks, bonds, and commodities all rallied over the period,
with commodities rallying the most early in the war, and
stocks rallying the most later in the war (when an Allied
victory looked to be more likely) and then at the conclusion
of the war. The pictures of what happened in other
countries, especially those that lost the war, were
radically different and are worthy of description at another
time. After the war, the United States was the preeminent
power and the dollar was the world’s reserve currency linked
to gold, with other currencies linked to the dollar. This
period is an excellent period for exemplifying 1) the power
and mechanics of central banks to hold interest rates down
with large fiscal deficits and 2) market action during war
periods.
1950s = Post-War Recovery. In the 1950s, after two decades
of depression and war, most individuals were financially
conservative, favoring security over risk-taking. The
markets reflected this by de facto pricing in negative
levels of earnings growth with very high risk premia (e.g.,
S&P 500 dividend yields in 1950 were 6.8%, more than 3 times
the 10-year bond yield of 1.9%, and earning yields were
nearly 14%). What happened in the ‘50s was exactly the
opposite of what was discounted. The post-war recovery was
strong (averaging 4% real growth over the decade), in part
through continued stimulative policy/low rates. As a result,
stocks did great. Since the government wasn’t running large
deficits, government debt burdens (government debt as a
percent of incomes) fell, while private debt levels were in
line with income growth, so debt growth was in line with
income growth. The decade ended in a financially healthy
position, with prices discounting relatively modest growth
and low inflation. The 1950s and the 1960s were also a
period in which middle-class workers were in high demand and
prospered.
1960s = From Boom to Monetary Bust. The first half of the
decade was an increasingly debt-financed boom that led to
balance of payments problems in the second half, which led
to the big paradigm shift of ending the Bretton Woods
monetary system. In the first half, the markets started off
discounting slow growth, but there was fast growth so stocks
did well until 1966. Then most everyone looked back on the
past 15 years of great stock market returns and was very
bullish. However, because debt and economic growth were too
fast and inflation was rising, the Fed’s monetary policy was
tightened (e.g., the yield curve inverted for the first time
since 1929). That produced the real (i.e.,
inflation-adjusted) peak in the stock market that wasn’t
broken for 20 years. In the second half of the 1960s, debt
grew faster than incomes and inflation started to rise with
a “growth recession,” and then a real recession came at the
end of the decade. Near the end of the ‘60s, the US balance
of payments problem became more clearly manifest in gold
reserves being drawn down, so it became clear that the Fed
would have to choose between two bad alternatives—i.e., a)
too tight a monetary policy that would lead to too weak an
economy or b) too much domestic stimulation to keep the
dollar up and inflation down. That led to the big paradigm
shift of abandoning the monetary system and ushering in the
1970s decade of stagflation, which was more opposite than
similar to the 1960s decade.
1970s = Low Growth and High Inflation (i.e.,
Stagflation). At the beginning of the decade, there was a
high level of indebtedness, a balance of payments problem,
and a strained gold standard that was abandoned in 1971. As
a result, the promise to convert money for gold was broken,
money was “printed” to ease debt burdens, the dollar was
devalued to reduce the external deficits, growth was slow
and inflation accelerated, and inflation-hedge assets did
great while stocks and bonds did badly during the
decade. There were two big waves up in inflation, inflation
expectations, and interest rates, with the first from 1970
to 1973 and the second and bigger one from 1977 to
1980-81. At the end of the decade, the markets discounted
very high inflation and low growth, which was just about the
opposite of what was discounted at the end of the prior
decade. Paul Volcker was appointed in August 1979. That set
the stage for the coming 1980s decade, which was pretty much
the opposite of the 1970s decade.
1980s = High Growth and Falling Inflation (i.e.,
Disinflation). The decade started with the markets
discounting high inflation and slow growth, yet the decade
was characterized by falling inflation and fast growth, so
inflation-hedge assets did terribly and stocks and bonds did
great. The paradigm shift occurred at the beginning of the
decade when the tight money conditions that Paul Volcker
imposed triggered a deflationary pressure, a big economic
contraction, and a debt crisis in which emerging markets
were unable to service their debt obligations to American
banks. This was managed well, so banks were provided with
adequate liquidity and debts weren’t written down in a way
that unacceptably damaged bank capital. However, it created
a shortage of dollars and capital flows that led the dollar
to rise, and it created disinflationary pressures that
allowed interest rates to decline while growth was strong,
which was great for stock and bond prices. As a result, this
was a great period for disinflationary growth and high
investment returns for stocks and bonds.
1990s = “Roaring”: From Bust to Bursting Bubble. This decade
started off with a recession, the first Gulf War, and the
easing of monetary policy and relatively fast debt-financed
growth and rising stock prices; it ended with a
“tech/dot-com” bubble (i.e., debt-financed purchases of
“tech” stocks and other financial assets at high prices)
that looked quite like the Nifty Fifty bubble of the late
1960s. That dot-com bubble burst just after the end of the
decade, at the same time there were the 9/11 attacks, which
were followed by very costly wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
2000-10 = “Roaring”: From Boom to Bursting Bubble. This
decade was the most like the 1920s, with a big debt bubble
leading up to the 2008-09 debt/economic bust that was
analogous to the 1929-32 debt bust. In both cases, these
drove interest rates to 0% and led to central banks printing
a lot of money and buying financial assets. The paradigm
shift happened in 2008-09, when quantitative easing began as
interest rates were held at or near 0%. The decade started
with very high discounted growth (e.g., expensive stocks)
during the dot-com bubble and was followed by the lowest
real growth rate of any of these nine decades (1.8%), which
was close to that of the 1930s. As a result, stocks had the
worst return of any other decade since the 1930s. In this
decade, as in the 1930s, interest rates went to 0%, the Fed
printed a lot of money as a way of easing with interest
rates at 0%, the dollar declined, and gold and
T-bonds were the best investments. At the end of the decade,
a very high level of indebtedness remained, but the markets
were discounting slow growth.
2010-Now = Reflation. The shift to the new paradigm, which
was also the bottom in the markets and the economy, came in
late 2008/early 2009 when risk premiums were extremely high,
interest rates hit 0%, and central banks began aggressive
quantitative easings (“printing money” and buying financial
assets). Investors took the money they got from selling
their financial assets to central banks and bought other
financial assets, which pushed up financial asset prices and
pushed down risk premiums and all asset classes’ expected
returns. As in the 1932-37 period, that caused financial
asset prices to rise a lot, which benefited those with
financial assets relative to those without them, which
widened the wealth gap. At the same time, technological
automation and businesses globalizing production to
lower-cost countries shifted wages, particularly for those
in the middle- and lower-income groups, while more of the
income gains over the decade went to companies and
high-income earners. Growth was slow, and inflation remained
low. Equities rallied consistently, driven by continued
falling discount rates (e.g., from central bank stimulus),
high profit margins (in part from automation keeping wage
growth down), and, more recently, from tax cuts. Meanwhile,
the growing wealth and income gaps helped drive a global
increase in populism. Now, asset prices are relatively high,
growth is priced to remain moderately strong, and inflation
is priced to remain low.
The tables that follow show a) the growth and inflation
rates that were discounted at the beginning of each decade,
b) growth, inflation, and other stats for each decade, c)
asset class returns in both nominal and real terms, and d)
money and credit ratios and growth rates of debt for each
decade.
Part 2: The Coming Paradigm Shift
The main forces behind the paradigm that we have been in
since 2009 have been:
Central banks have been lowering interest rates and
doing quantitative easing (i.e., printing money and
buying financial assets) in ways that are
unsustainable. Easing in these ways has been a strong
stimulative force since 2009, with just minor
tightenings that caused “taper tantrums.” That bolstered
asset prices both directly (from the actual buying of
the assets) and indirectly (because the lowering of
interest rates both raised P/Es and led to debt-financed
stock buybacks and acquisitions, and levered up the
buying of private equity and real estate). That form of
easing is approaching its limits because interest rates
can’t be lowered much more and quantitative easing is
having diminishing effects on the economy and the
markets as the money that is being pumped in is
increasingly being stuck in the hands of investors who
buy other investments with it, which drives up asset
prices and drives down their future nominal and real
returns and their returns relative to cash (i.e., their
risk premiums). Expected returns and risk premiums of
non-cash assets are being driven down toward the cash
return, so there is less incentive to buy them, so it
will become progressively more difficult to push their
prices up. At the same time, central banks doing more of
this printing and buying of assets will produce more
negative real and nominal returns that will lead
investors to increasingly prefer alternative forms of
money (e.g., gold) or other storeholds of wealth.
As these forms of easing (i.e., interest rate cuts and QE)
cease to work well and the problem of there being too much
debt and non-debt liabilities (e.g., pension and healthcare
liabilities) remains, the other forms of easing (most
obviously, currency depreciations and fiscal deficits that
are monetized) will become increasingly likely. Think of it
this way: one person’s debts are another’s assets. Monetary
policy shifts back and forth between a) helping debtors at
the expense of creditors (by keeping real interest rates
down, which creates bad returns for creditors and good
relief for debtors) and b) helping creditors at the expense
of debtors (by keeping real interest rates up, which creates
good returns for creditors and painful costs for
debtors). By looking at who has what assets and liabilities,
asking yourself who the central bank needs to help most, and
figuring out what they are most likely to do given the tools
they have at their disposal, you can get at the most likely
monetary policy shifts, which are the main drivers of
paradigm shifts.
To me, it seems obvious that they have to help the debtors
relative to the creditors. At the same time, it appears to
me that the forces of easing behind this paradigm (i.e.,
interest rate cuts and quantitative easing) will have
diminishing effects. For these reasons, I believe that
monetizations of debt and currency depreciations will
eventually pick up, which will reduce the value of money and
real returns for creditors and test how far creditors will
let central banks go in providing negative real returns
before moving into other assets.
To be clear, I am not saying that this shift will happen
immediately. I am saying that I think it is approaching and
will have a big effect on what the next paradigm will look
like.
The chart below shows interest rate and QE changes in the US
going back to 1920 so you can see the two times that
happened—in 1931-45 and in 2008-14.
The next three charts show the US dollar, the euro, and the
yen since 1960. As you can see, when interest rates hit 0%,
the money printing began in all of these economies. The ECB
ended its QE program at the end of 2018, while the BoJ is
still increasing the money supply. Now, all three central
banks are turning to these forms of easing again, as growth
is slowing and inflation remains below target levels.
2. There has been a wave of stock buybacks, mergers,
acquisitions, and private equity and venture capital
investing that has been funded by both cheap money and
credit and the enormous amount of cash that was pushed into
the system. That pushed up equities and other asset prices
and drove down future returns. It has also made cash nearly
worthless. (I will explain more about why that is and why it
is unsustainable in a moment.) The gains in investment asset
prices benefited those who have investment assets much more
than those who don’t, which increased the wealth gap, which
is creating political anti-capitalist sentiment and
increasing pressure to shift more of the money printing into
the hands of those who are not investors/capitalists.
3. Profit margins grew rapidly due to advances in automation
and globalization that reduced the costs of labor.The chart
below on the left shows that growth. It is unlikely that
this rate of profit margin growth will be sustained, and
there is a good possibility that margins will shrink in the
environment ahead. Because this increased share of the pie
going to capitalists was accomplished by a decreased share
of the pie going to workers, it widened the wealth gap and
is leading to increased talk of anti-corporate, pro-worker
actions.
4. Corporate tax cuts made stocks worth more because they
give more returns. The
most recent cut was a one-off boost to stock prices. Such
cuts won’t be sustained and there is a good chance they will
be reversed, especially if the Democrats gain more power.
These were big tailwinds that have supported stock
prices. The chart below shows our estimates of what would
have happened to the S&P 500 if each of these unsustainable
things didn’t happen.
The Coming Paradigm Shift
There’s a saying in the markets that “he who lives by the
crystal ball is destined to eat ground glass.” While I’m not
sure exactly when or how the paradigm shift will occur, I
will share my thoughts about it. I
think that it is highly likely that sometime in the next few
years, 1) central banks will run out of stimulant to boost
the markets and the economy when the economy is weak, and 2)
there will be an enormous amount of debt and non-debt
liabilities (e.g., pension and healthcare) that will
increasingly be coming due and won’t be able to be funded
with assets. Said differently, I think that the paradigm
that we are in will most likely end when a) real interest
rate returns are pushed so low that investors holding the
debt won’t want to hold it and will start to move to
something they think is better and b) simultaneously, the
large need for money to fund liabilities will contribute to
the “big squeeze.” At that point, there won’t be enough
money to meet the needs for it, so there will have to be
some combination of large deficits that are monetized,
currency depreciations, and large tax increases, and these
circumstances will likely increase the conflicts between the
capitalist haves and the socialist have-nots. Most likely,
during this time, holders of debt will receive very low or
negative nominal and real returns in currencies that are
weakening, which will de facto be a wealth tax.
Right now, approximately 13 trillion dollars’ worth of
investors’ money is held in zero or below-zero
interest-rate-earning debt. That means that these
investments are worthless for producing income (unless they
are funded by liabilities that have even more negative
interest rates). So these investments can at best be
considered safe places to hold principal until they’re not
safe because they offer terrible real returns (which is
probable) or because rates rise and their prices go down
(which we doubt central bankers will allow).
Thus far, investors have been happy about the rate/return
decline because investors pay more attention to the price
gains that result from falling interest rates than the
falling future rates of return. The diagram below helps
demonstrate that. When interest rates go down (right side of
the diagram), that causes the present value of assets to
rise (left side of the diagram), which gives the illusion
that investments are providing good returns, when in reality
the returns are just future returns being pulled forward by
the “present value effect.” As a result future returns will
be lower.
That will end when interest rates reach their lower limits
(slightly below 0%), when the prospective returns for risky
assets are pushed down to near the expected return for cash,
and when the demand for money to pay for debt, pension, and
healthcare liabilities increases. While there is still a
little room left for stimulation to produce a bit more of
this present value effect and a bit more of shrinking risk
premiums, there’s not much.
At the same time, the liabilities will be coming due, so
it’s unlikely that there will be enough money pushed into
the system to meet those obligations. Then it is likely that
there will be a battle over 1) how much of those promises
won’t be kept (which will make those who are owed them
angry), 2) how much they will be met with higher taxes
(which will make the rich poorer, which will make them
angry), and 3) how much they will be met via much bigger
deficits that will be monetized (which will depreciate the
value of money and depreciate the real returns of
investments, which will hurt those with investments,
especially those holding debt).
The charts below show the wave of liabilities that is coming
at us in the US.
*Note: Medicare, Social
Security, and other government programs represent the
present value of estimates of future outlays from the
Congressional Budget Office. Of course, some of the IOUs
have assets or cash flows partially backing them (like tax
revenue covering some Social Security outlays). 10-year
forward projections are based on government projections of
public debt and social welfare payments.
*Note: Medicare, Social
Security, and other government programs represent the
present value of estimates of future outlays from the
Congressional Budget Office. Of course, some of the IOUs
have assets or cash flows partially backing them (like tax
revenue covering some Social Security outlays). 10-year
forward projections are based on government projections of
public debt and social welfare payments.
History has shown us and logic tells us that there is no
limit to the ability of central banks to hold nominal and
real interest rates down via their purchases by flooding the
world with more money, and that it is the creditor who
suffers from the low return.
Said differently:
The enormous amounts of money in no- and low-returning
investments won’t be nearly enough to fund the liabilities,
even though the pile looks like a lot. That is because they
don’t provide adequate income. In fact, most of them won’t
provide any income, so they are worthless for that
purpose. They just provide a “safe” place to store
principal. As a result, to finance their expenditures,
owners of them will have to sell off principal, which will
diminish the amount of principal that they have left, so
that they a) will need progressively higher and higher
returns on the dwindling amounts (which they have no
prospect of getting) or b) they will have to accelerate
their eating away at principal until the money runs out.
That will happen at the same time that there will be greater
internal conflicts (mostly between socialists and
capitalists) about how to divide the pie and greater
external conflicts (mostly between countries about how to
divide both the global economic pie and global
influence). In such a world, storing one’s money in cash and
bonds will no longer be safe. Bonds are a claim on money and
governments are likely to continue printing money to pay
their debts with devalued money. That’s the easiest and
least controversial way to reduce the debt burdens and
without raising taxes. My guess is that bonds will provide
bad real and nominal returns for those who hold them, but
not lead to significant price declines and higher interest
rates because I think that it is most likely that central
banks will buy more of them to hold interest rates down and
keep prices up. In other words, I suspect that the new
paradigm will be characterized by large debt monetizations
that will be most similar to those that occurred in the
1940s war years.
So, the big question worth pondering at this time is which
investments will perform well in a reflationary environment
accompanied by large liabilities coming due and with
significant internal conflict between capitalists and
socialists, as well as external conflicts. It is also a good
time to ask what will be the next-best currency or storehold
of wealth to have when most reserve currency central bankers
want to devalue their currencies in a fiat currency system.
Most people now believe the best “risky investments” will
continue to be equity and equity-like investments, such as
leveraged private equity, leveraged real estate, and venture
capital, and this is especially true when central banks are
reflating. As a result, the world is leveraged long, holding
assets that have low real and nominal expected returns that
are also providing historically low returns relative to cash
returns (because of the enormous amount of money that has
been pumped into the hands of investors by central banks and
because of other economic forces that are making companies
flush with cash). I think these are unlikely to be good real
returning investments and that those that will most likely
do best will be those that do well when the value of money
is being depreciated and domestic and international
conflicts are significant, such as gold. Additionally, for
reasons I will explain in the near future, most investors
are underweighted in such assets, meaning that if they just
wanted to have a better balanced portfolio to reduce risk,
they would have more of this sort of asset. For this reason,
I believe that it would be both risk-reducing and
return-enhancing to consider adding gold to one’s
portfolio. I will soon send out an explanation of why I
believe that gold is an effective portfolio diversifier.