Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis |
Posted: 05 Jun 2011 10:22 PM PDT Unfortunately the video is not embeddable, but please consider this short link on waterboarding where Playboy.com journalist Mike Guy underwent waterboarding by a trained member of the U.S. military in the site's new Lab Rat feature. Personally I believe that it torture. So does Senator John McCain. Regardless of whether you think it is torture, the fact is, waterboarding is counterproductive. For more details, please consider the following articles
My position is simple: "Thinking that torture is wrong is not a liberal or conservative value - it is simply a value." Waterboarding is torture. Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
Guru Focus Interview with a Value Investor; Dissimilar Starting Points, Many Similar Conclusions Posted: 05 Jun 2011 11:46 AM PDT Inquiring minds are reading a Guru Focus Interview with Investor Arnold Van Den Berg, a value investor. Guru Focus: You seem to believe that there will be high inflation risk in the coming years. What is the best strategy in this inflationary environment?The Guru Focus interview is well worth a read in entirety. Are Stocks Cheap? Stocks look cheap now but they aren't because of three factors.
Van Den Berg discussed point number one in detail. I covered points one and two in Negative Annualized Stock Market Returns for the Next 10 Years or Longer? It's Far More Likely Than You Think. For a follow-up on those points, please see Anatomy of Bubbles; Negative Returns for a Decade Revisited; Is Gold in a Bubble? Earnings High From Record Global Stimulus Point number three should be obvious, but obviously it's not given pervasive bullish sentiment nearly everywhere, including smack in the middle of article with bearish sounding titles. For example, please consider a few excerpts from Dow Has Its Longest Weekly Slump Since 2004
In contrast, I think it is crystal clear much of the recovery is a mirage based on unsustainable government stimulus, that stimulus is fading, there is little chance right now for more stimulus, and that corporate profits have peaked this cycle in conjunction with a slowing global economy. I discussed the slowing global economy in a video: Mish on Yahoo Finance Daily Ticker on Slowing Global Economy; U.S. Manufacturing ISM Plunge; Order Backlog and New Orders Barely Above Contraction High Inflation Coming? Van Den Berg clearly has a different definition of inflation and deflation than I do. I prefer to view inflation and deflation in terms of money supply and credit. He looks at prices. He is calling for "high inflation" but high means 5%. Can we see a 5% CPI with falling demand for credit? Sure, why not? And if it plays out that way, there will be no hiding places at all. Treasuries and stocks both would be hammered. It is one of the reasons I do not like treasuries now. It is also a good reason why corporate bond rates at 2.33% for 10 years constitute a bubble. , Bear in mind that a renewed credit crunch might send treasury yields lower but it will not be good for corporate bonds, especially junk bonds. Dissimilar Starting Points, Many Similar Conclusions Van Den Berg does not like gold. I do. I gave my reasons in a Yahoo Finance video last week. Please see Why I Continue to Like Gold for a discussion. There are other differences as well. However, we have both arrived at the similar conclusions regarding equity valuations in general even though we have very different starting points about what inflation is. Conclusions
Mike "Mish" Shedlock http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List |
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