We are keeping with our summer series of more charts and fewer words. Most of this newsletter will be discussing interest rates, inflation and why many fear the eventual monetary stimulus unwind.
The chart above attempts to rebuild a history of U.S. interest rates over the span of the country’s independence. Two items stick out to us from the chart. The first is the low levels of interest rate volatility since the U.S. went off the gold standard. It begs the questions, has the U.S. Federal Reserve mastered the financial engineering of our economy so that past episodes of rate volatility will not repeat? Or are we becoming complacent in future rate movements?
Negative real rates have been short-lived throughout history which suggests something needs to change. Either inflation subsides or rates move up. Or a combination of the two. The Federal Reserve governors have recently been communicating a desire to return to a higher and more normal interest rate environment. We fully admit there is a difference between wishes and reality, but the increasing level of communications suggest the stimulative environment may be nearing its end. The dot plot above shows their expectations for future rates through 2023 and beyond.
To illustrate the concern, the chart above shows the impact of higher inflation on low-earning government bonds. The chart demonstrates the real value of a long-term government bond (using a German 30-year bond as an extreme example) over the holding period. With a 3% long-term inflation rate, the bond’s value is cut in half over the 30 years. Investors have benefitted the past 35 years from ever lower interest rates and inflation allowing bond values to appreciate. That is likely coming to an end.
We are firm believers that inflation can not become a runaway issue until wage growth anticipates inflation rather than reacts to it. At this point, the combination of our measures does not suggest that runaway inflation is a near-term threat. However, as the previous chart shows, even in a low inflation environment, bonds exhibit a negative return profile.
Lastly, since 2019, our portfolios have favored large, U.S. equities, represented by the S&P 500 index, while limiting our exposure to international equities. Though our cash position has prevented us from fully participating in the current risk-on environment, our favoring of S&P 500 companies over international companies has benefited our clients. Specifically, the S&P 500 has risen 54% over the past 2 years compared to the U.K. equity index (as one example) losing 1% over that same time. Many factors have driven the disparity of returns such as underlying earnings growth and quality of companies. However, the polling results below may suggest other items are contributing to U.S. market optimism.
If you think you could take on a kangaroo and win, maybe you are willing to buy into stretched equity valuations and a tenuous bond market. Our money is on the kangaroo…