Yes, in many ways he’s a very flawed
candidate and he’s exceptionally unpopular one. His opportunity lies in
Secretary Clinton’s weaknesses as a flawed campaigner with her trust/honesty
issues (whether they’re perception or real, is irrelevant) and a popularity
level that’s in the Trumpian realm. They’re literally the most unpopular candidates to run for President – they key for each, might just be avoiding appearing
in the press in the final week! In all likelihood, the favorable
demographics and Mr. Trump’s weaknesses should be enough for Secretary Clinton
to win, assuming she gets enough of those young voters who stubbornly only
turnout to vote for President Obama, to the polls! That said, I wouldn’t expect
a majority in the popular vote or much of a mandate despite the claims
otherwise.
- Limits of monetary policy and R*
- Limits of monetary policy and R*
One of the more thought provoking things that Our Man has
read recently is this essay from San Francisco Fed’s John Williams that came
out just before the staff of various Central Banks met at Jackson Hole.
In it, he argues the world has changed (and the neutral rate of interest is
lower), thus monetary policy needs to change and that monetary policy is not
the only answer. Suggested changes on the monetary policy side include a
higher inflation target, or replacing inflation targeting with a flexible
price-level or nominal GDP targeting framework. Both of these suggest a
lower-for-longer (maybe forever) since with inflation (and GDP) undershooting
existing targets (and thus increasing the distance to future targets) the
pressure to increase rates diminishes further.
As for what lower-for-longer/ever means…well, there are some thoughts on that below.
- People’s QE
- People’s QE
It may go by a
different name, and under many different guises, but it’s coming to a country
near you…soon! With monetary policy at close to its limits, and
rising populist sentiment in numerous countries around the globe, the stage is
being set for “People’s QE”. What does Our Man mean by “People’s QE” –
think massive fiscal spending, supported (directly, but possibly indirectly to
get around legal issues) by an aggressive Central Bank QE program.
It will be done differently across countries, but the most successful will by
those countries that realize “infrastructure spending” in the 21st
century while not yet well defined likely doesn’t mean the same as it did in
the post-World War 2 period! Our Man’s sneaking suspicion is that
Britain, with the readymade excuse of Brexit and seeking global
competitiveness, will do it best with a mixture of old school infrastructure
spending (bridges, roads, etc), new-style infrastructure spending (start with
internet/cellular connectivity, but who knows what else, maybe it’s drones,
etc), education (especially in very pro-Brexit areas) and healthcare (updating
hospitals, from the bricks and mortar to processes/etc).
- Regulation
- Regulation
Despite all the talk in the political realm,
Our Man rather suspects that increased scrutiny on Banks and Financials
(post-08) was the start of a trend rather than a one-off, and wouldn’t be surprised
to see Technology and Healthcare cos next in the regulatory firing line.
- The market will either be much higher or much lower within the next 12mos
- The market will either be much higher or much lower within the next 12mos
Our Man just can’t tell you which
but is pretty sure it ain’t going to hang around here. The downside case
is the clearest with investors able to take their pick of potential issues,
including China, slow growth, falling Earnings/high valuations, Europe and the
Euro, Brexit, etc. The upside case is more complicated, but linked to negative
rates (and the prospect of negative or low rates for some time). At a certain level negative rates make sense;
it’s an acceptance that we can’t afford our debts, and thus pricing the
interest rate at the level at which we can amortize them. If this is
true, and as yields turn negative and assets fall in real terms (with central
banks adding money to prevent nominal falls), then the answer is to buy
duration, and stocks are exceptionally long duration instruments. So if
you think negative yields are here for the long-haul, you want to be buying
stocks…hand over fist.
Portfolio Update
Our Man’s felt that the market is sitting at the edge of the binary path for a couple of months now, and so he made some changes to the portfolio earlier in the third quarter. Out have gone all the commodity-related positions (Gold, Silver, and Gold Miners) which have generated exceptional profits year-to-date, but are stretched following their strong runs and vulnerable to dollar-strength. Into the portfolio have come some (levered) market equity positions, in particular as Our Man’s Technical book saw a tentative buy signal – expect to see more, if the market’s price action suggests much higher highs ahead. The Currency and International positions remain unchanged, though the Argentinean equities are nearing the end of their (so far successful) investment horizon. Our Man full expects to sit here, not doing much, and let price determine whether some of these positions are sold or are joined by substantially more equities.
Portfolio Update
Our Man’s felt that the market is sitting at the edge of the binary path for a couple of months now, and so he made some changes to the portfolio earlier in the third quarter. Out have gone all the commodity-related positions (Gold, Silver, and Gold Miners) which have generated exceptional profits year-to-date, but are stretched following their strong runs and vulnerable to dollar-strength. Into the portfolio have come some (levered) market equity positions, in particular as Our Man’s Technical book saw a tentative buy signal – expect to see more, if the market’s price action suggests much higher highs ahead. The Currency and International positions remain unchanged, though the Argentinean equities are nearing the end of their (so far successful) investment horizon. Our Man full expects to sit here, not doing much, and let price determine whether some of these positions are sold or are joined by substantially more equities.
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