Money and Finance
Take flight from Europe’s policy food fight – By Bill Gross
What has become obvious in the last few years is that debt-driven growth is a flawed business model when financial markets no longer have an appetite for it. In addition to initial conditions of debt to gross domestic product and related metrics, the ability of a sovereign to snatch more than its fair share of growth from an anorexic global economy has become the defining condition of creditworthiness – and very few nations are equal to the challenge.
…
Investors, then, must be leery of the self-reinforcing dynamic that has many fathers and spreads much of the blame: ad hoc and insufficient policies from fiscal and monetary authorities; decades of balance sheet and savings abuse from the southern euroland periphery; unresponsive and insufficient support from supranational agencies, including the International Monetary Fund; a me-first attitude from developing nations that control global reserves. All of them join the world’s most dysfunctional family – euroland – in telling others what to do, but not listening much.
As a result, deleveraging, fiscal tightening and potential defaults are on the economic and investment horizon. Investors should be in a “risk off” mode. When this is finally over, a lot of parties will owe the world one giant “Scusi”.
-
The Secret Of Bridgewater's Success Is In Its Understanding Of The Recession
Found via Canadian Value Investor. The Bridgewater view may be summarized like this:Business and market cycles occur every 5 to 8 years, and may be addressed by policy makers with a typical mix of fiscal and monetary policy.What Bridgewater calls Long...
-
Hussman Weekly Market Comment: The Heart Of The Matter
Over the past 13 years, the S&P 500 has underperformed even the depressed return on risk-free Treasury bills. Real U.S. gross domestic investment has not grown at all since 1999, and even as a share of GDP, real investment remains weak. The ongoing...
-
Bill Gross – December 2011 Investment Outlook: Family Feud
Proposals from the German/French axis in the last few days have heartened risk markets under the assumption that fiscal union anchored by a smaller number of less debt-laden core countries will finally allow the ECB to cap yields in Italy and Spain and...
-
Hayman Capital Letter: The Cognitive Dissonance Of It All - By Kyle Bass
We continue to be very concerned about systemic risk in the global economy. Thus far, the systemic risk that was prevalent in the global credit markets in 2007 and 2008 has not subsided; rather, it has simply been transferred from the private sector to...
-
Hussman Weekly Market Comment: The Destructive Implications Of The Bailout - Understanding Equilibrium
One of the features that has enabled the bureaucratic abuse of the public during the past year has been the frantic, if temporary, flight-to-safety by investors. The Treasury has issued an enormous volume of debt into the frightened hands of investors...
Money and Finance