INVESTING

Should You Be Investing in the Dollar Now?

Story image for news on investing from Investorplace.com

 

The average period of economic expansion since the 1940s is roughly five years. The current recovery? We are now at the six year mark.

How does one reconcile the notion that there is no need to curb economic growth or subdue inflation with the Fed’s intent to raise borrowing costs? Some believe that committee members wish to deflate asset prices before they get out of hand. By most valuation measures, though,prices are already distorted.Yet, there’s a problem with the current environment that few are willing to talk about; that is, historically, the Federal Reserve raises overnight lending rates to slow economic growth and suppress inflation. This time around, however, the U.S. economy is already growing at a lethargic pace and inflation is negligible.

Others explain that the Fed is not really tightening borrowing costs but rather, transitioning from ultra-easy monetary policy to extremely easy monetary policy. This explanation amounts to little more than word play.

Perhaps there is a more legitimate justification for why the central bank hopes to begin a series of modest rate hikes in 2015. Could it be that the Fed needs to provide itself with greater firepower before the onset of the next recession?

Again, the time horizon for the current recovery is already longer than the typical expansionary period. It follows that if the Fed fails to leave the 0% level in 2015, it would find itself introducing a fourth iteration of quantitative easing (QE4) without ever having claimed a higher ground first.

Top 10 Fidelity Funds to Double Your Nest Egg
New report names the 10 best Fidelity funds to own now — and the 3 funds you must avoid at all costs. Click here to download your FREE copy!

  • The 7 Best ETFs to Buy for June

The Fed’s prayers notwithstanding, we may not see meaningfully higher borrowing costs for decades to come. Consider Japan’s quandary. Its central bank, the Bank of Japan, has attempted to stimulate its humdrum economy for 15 years, employing unconventional asset purchases as well as ultra-low lending rates.

Today, the BOJ’s overnight “call” rate is at the 0% level. The BOJ’s highest overnight rate this century? A paltry 0.5%.

Granted, the U.S. may not be as dependent on exports as Japan. And the Japanese people are bigger savers than we are. Nevertheless, why would anyone expect the Fed to push rates to meaningfully higher levels?

Even if the Fed managed to get rates up to 1% by the end of 2016 — even if overnight borrowing costs peaked at 1.5% in 2017 — wouldn’t rates head back down to the “zero bound” when the next recession arrives? Recognizing the history of economic cycles, we are closer to the end of the expansion than the beginning of it.

There are two instances (1948, 1980) when the U.S. economy had been growing at a sub-par clip and the Fed acted to raise its target lending rate. In both cases, a new recession occurred in less than a year’s time. Put another way, if the Fed lifts its rate target in 2015, one should anticipate an exceptionally high likelihood of economic contraction in 2016.

There are several implications for market-based asset classes. First, intermediate-term treasuries still provide safety in progressively uncertain economic surroundings. The Fed can talk about pushing borrowing costs up marginally; journalists can squawk about rising bond yields.

In reality, however, the 10-year yield at 2.14% is approximately where it began the year, and the iShares 7-10 Year Treasury Bond ETF (IEF) remains in a long-term technical uptrend.

One might also want to remember that the 2.14% yield on the 10-year Treasury Note is a far better value than the Japanese 10-year at 0.4% or the German 10-year at 0.53%.

 

 

[“source-investorplace.com”]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *