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May 26, 2009 The Illusion of Safety |
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Last week the Wall Street Journal published an article that (assuming it wasn't a clever satire) perfectly illustrates the train wreck that's in store for clients of mainstream money managers. In the first-person-confessional style that's becoming popuar in the financial press, the reporter laments his diminished 401(K):
There are several flawed assumptions buried in this poor guy's story. But for now let's focus on the big one: the idea that stocks and bonds offer predictable long-term risks and returns. Financial planners base this comforting theory on the experience of the six decades since the end of World War II. To them, this constitutes the "normal" market. The problem is that those six decades weren't normal. On the contrary, they were unique: history's greatest credit bubble. During this bubble, governments, armed with fiat currencies that they could create out of thin air, printed more and more paper each year, which made it easy for consumers and businesses to borrow and spend. Companies were able to sell more at ever-higher prices and report correspondingly higher earnings, which translated into higher stock prices. The early stages of a credit bubble are like this, with everything seeming just a little easier than it was for Mom and Dad. To hide the effects of their depreciating currencies, governments then started massaging their official statistics (see Shadowstats.com for the real, more ominous numbers). The result was a world of rising debt and illusory price stability, in which stocks went up 10% or so each year and bonds protected their owners from the occasional recession. Hence the idea that you just have to find the right mix of these two asset classes and you'll be, as the Journal puts it, bulletproof. Unfortunately, the fun part of the bubble is over. Today's governments have (or believe that they have) no choice but to ramp up the printing presses to prevent a cascade failure of the global financial system. This will accelerate the decline in fiat currency values beyond the power of official obfuscation. The markets will catch on, and traders will dump the dollar, yen, and euro. Because bonds pay a fixed amount each year, they depend on the value of their underlying currency. Destroy the currency through excessive borrowing and printing, and bonds cease to be safe. Soon, even "risk-free" bonds like U.S. Treasuries will come to be seen as a trap, a sort of financial roach motel in which your savings check in but don't check out. Which means the millions of shell-shocked investors who are behaving like the Journal reporter, loading up on bonds for safety, are about to wave goodbye to what little they have left. BUY OFFSHORE GOLD AND SILVER AT GOLDMONEY
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John
Rubino John Rubino is author of Clean Money: Picking Winners in the Green Tech Boom (Wiley, December 2008), co-author, with GoldMoney's James Turk, of The Collapse of the Dollar and How to Profit From It (Doubleday, January 2008), and author of How to Profit from the Coming Real Estate Bust (Rodale, 2003). After earning a Finance MBA from New York University, he spent the 1980s on Wall Street, as a currency trader, equity analyst and junk bond analyst. During the 1990s he was a featured columnist with TheStreet.com and a frequent contributor to Individual Investor, Online Investor, and Consumers Digest, among many other publications. He now writes for CFA Magazine and edits DollarCollapse.com and GreenStockInvesting.com. Copyright © 2006-2009 John Rubino Image rendition and html coding Copyright © 2000-2009 SafeHaven.com ADVERTISEMENTS
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