Although the U.S. stock market continues to hit new nominal highs on
a nearly daily basis, the U.S. economy bumps along at a lackluster pace.
This disconnect has been achieved by a massive Fed experiment in
monetary stimulation. Through the combination of seemingly endless maintenance
of zero interest rates and the injection of some $1trillion a year of synthetic
money into fixed-income markets, the Fed is hoping that the boom it is creating
on Wall Street will lead to a boom on Main Street. In reality, this a
very dangerous economic gamble of enormously high stakes. As
we have seen in the recent past, financial bubbles can leave catastrophe in
their wake.
In October 2013, Professor Robert Schiller, the renowned Yale economist, was
awarded a Nobel Prize together with two others for research into asset bubbles
and resulting values. In a recent interview in the German newspaper, Der
Spiegel, he said, "I am not yet sounding the alarm. But in many countries stock
exchanges are at a high level and prices have risen sharply in some property
markets. That could end badly. I am most worried about the boom in the
U.S. stock market. Also because our economy is still weak and
vulnerable."
However, there are many in the financial establishment who disagree with the
professor, including, most interestingly, Professor Karl Case, the co-creator of
the famous Case-Shiller Home Price Index. Most market participants
either believe that current share prices are fully justified by corporate
metrics or they believe the Fed has expertise, and the ability, to prevent an
ugly sell-off if things turn out badly. This debate has become the
defining conversation as we head into the end of the year.
However, those who believe
that QE will produce positive results to compensate for the risks are finding
their position to be increasingly difficult to defend. At the
International Monetary Fund's November annual conference in Washington, Mr.
David Wilcox, reputed to be one of the Fed's most important economic advisors,
offered insight into some problems facing QE. In essence, he maintained that the
Fed's QE-3 program is producing only very limited results in terms of U.S.
economic growth. At the same time, he seemed to hint that unlimited QE could
create serious financial market distortions.
Many market observers, including myself, think that the Fed's
open-ended QE program has been a massively expensive failure. As a
result, market watchers have become increasingly eager for the program to be
wound down, and many do not understand the Fed's reluctance to taper its monthly
bond purchases.
Although many of the more open-minded members of the Fed's Open Market
Committee may have lost faith in the ability of QE to deliver tangible gains in
the real economy, they have also shown some concern that a diminishing
of QE could trigger stock and bond market turmoil. There can be little
doubt that such an outcome could usher in a new round of recession. In other
words the "good" that the Fed sees in QE may merely be the prevention of a
potentially worse reality.
A majority of investors have seemed to convince themselves that QE
has become an unneeded crutch that the Fed will be more than happy to abandon by
the end of next year. Many believe that such an outcome will place limited
downward pressure on stocks, bonds and real estate. These views are Pollyannish in the
extreme. The recent sell-off in the bond market should attest to
that. On the other hand, some investors, including some aggressive hedge funds,
seem to be operating under the belief that QE will not be ended any time soon,
if ever. They have even borrowed massively to invest on booming financial
markets that stand already at record highs. Today, total New York Stock Exchange
margin debt stands at $412 billion, an all-time record.
The disagreements of the investing public are of little weight in comparison
to the opinions of the FOMC members themselves (such is the world we have
created). The key point for
2014 is how many voting members of the new Yellen-led FOMC will follow her down
the Keynesian cul-de-sac. Should a majority of the FOMC feel
forced, in the national interest, to vote against an expansion of the
Bernanke-era stimulus policies (which we believe Ms. Yellen is sure to propose),
financial markets could be in for a severe shock.
Those who wish to continue equity investing in face of this risk
might be well-advised to ensure they have adequate hedging policies in place.
Investors in both equities and bonds must question how the Fed can coax
a market into a continued boom in a manner disconnected from economic reality.
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