Tuesday, January 6, 2009

"Bernanke is making a time-inconsistent promise to hold interest rates low for an extended period."

From Alphaville:

"Battle of the bears

“An investment operation is one which, upon through analysis, promises safety of principal and a satisfactory return. Operations not meeting these requirements are speculative( I AGREE ).””

That’s a quote from legendary value investor Benjamin Graham and it features prominently in James Montier’s first strategy piece of 2009.

Titled “Bonds - speculation not investment”, the SocGen strategist reveals he has fallen out with colleague and uber bear Albert Edwards for the first time in eight years.

The reason for the row is, as you might have guessed, about the current state of the government bond market.

From my perspective as a long-term value-orientated investor, bonds simply don’t offer any value. They already price in the US slipping into Japanese-style prolonged deflation. However, they offer no protection at all if (and it may be a big if) the Fed can succeed in reintroducing inflation (what Keynes described as the “euthanasia of the rentier”). There may be a ‘speculative’ case for continuing to hold bonds, but there isn’t an investment case.( I AGREE )

To my mind, in principle, government bond valuation is relatively simple. I see the value as the summation of three components: the real yield, expected inflation, and an inflation risk premium. The market tells us the real yield for ten-year US government bonds is around 2%. Given that the nominal yield is also around 2% at the moment, the market is implying that inflation will be around 0% p.a. over the next ten years.( SILLY )

As regular readers will know Mr Edwards thinks differently. This from his final note of 2008.

John Kemp, a Reuters columnist wrote an interesting article yesterday entitled “Fed unleashes greatest bubble of all”. He stated, “Bernanke is making a time-inconsistent promise( THIS MIGHT BE WHY HE'S NOT CALLING HIS POLICY QUANTITATIVE EASING, WHICH WOULD DEFINITELY BE A TIME-INCONSISTENT PROMISE, AND SO HE'S AVOIDED THAT BY NOT TARGETING AN INFLATION RATE, HOPING TO KEEP THEM DOWN. IT'S ALSO A WAY TO GIVE A SIGNAL TO INVESTORS THAT INFLATION COULD BE AHEAD, WITHOUT CAUSING A PANIC TO SELL TREASURIES. ) to hold interest rates low for an extended period.” For if the policy is successful, investors buying bonds at current levels will incur “massive losses”.( TRUE ) I have been debating this very subject with my colleague James Montier recently. After all how much lower can bond yields go (see chart below)? But for now I retain my bias towards government bonds. Investors, I believe, underestimate how very close the global economy is to getting trapped in outright deflation( COULD BE ). We expect panic( I DON'T ) to grip the markets at some point in the first half of next year, sending both equity prices and bond yields substantially lower.( THAT'S WHAT COULD HAPPEN )

In fact, Montier says the divide between himself and Edwards is not as wide as it first might seem. He says both men could be right just at different times.
I tend to view the world through the lens of a long-term valueorientated absolute-return investor. Albert is often more willing to tolerate momentum driven shorter term positions (believe it or not!). Perhaps it is these differences in approach that have lead to us to adopt different positions on the merits of holding government bonds.

Of course, there maybe a speculative case for buying bonds. If the market is myopic (which is almost always is) then poor short-term economic data, and the arrival of outright deflation could easily see yields dragged even lower. Thus riding the news flow may be a perfectly sensible but nonetheless ‘speculative’ approach. However, I am an investor not a speculator (as I have proved myself to be appalling at the latter), thus government bonds have no place in my portfolio.

So what happens next? Montier says he does not have a clue. But he does have a nice a pay off line.

If the alternative scenario comes to pass and the Fed successfully reintroduces inflation (leading to what Keynes so vividly described as the ‘euthanasia of the rentier’2) then bonds look distinctly poor value, thus the risk is exceptionally high and skewed in one direction. As Jim Grant so elegantly put it government bonds may well end up being “return free risk” (as opposed to their more normal nomenclature of risk-free return). If yields were to rise from 2% to 4.5% investors would stand to suffer a capital loss of nearly 20%.

Return-free risk - marvelous!"

No comments: