DailyWealth Investment Newsletter  

About DailyWealth Premium Content DailyWealth Archive
DailyWealth Investment Newsletter DailyWealth Contributors DailyWealth Resources DailyWealth Market Window
 
DailyWealth Print Edition Print Edition | Sponsored Link:
True Wealth Login
Interest Rate Forecast:
Now Through 2010

by Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

July 10, 2006

“Better buy that house now, before interest rates go up,”
-Every realtor, everywhere, for the last quarter century.

Most realtors in America believe that the day they’re granted their real estate license, they also become experts in predicting interest rates…

And the prediction is always the same: interest rates are headed higher. Yet nobody bothers to check their quarter-century track record. Realtors have generally been wrong for a quarter century, as this chart of 25 years of mortgage rates shows:

As you can see, the 25-year trend has been down… almost relentlessly.

And any time rates actually do start to tick higher - as they are now - everyone gets in a panic.

If you’re going to trust someone’s interest rate crystal ball, it shouldn’t be your local real estate broker’s. Instead, you ought to trust Bill Gross’…

Bill Gross, if you don’t know, is the world’s biggest money manager. He controls at least $600 billion dollars, heading up the investments at PIMCO. Bill’s got most of that money in bonds, so his interest rate forecasts are incredibly important.

In his recent Investment Outlook newsletter, Bill shared with readers his interest rate forecast for now through 2010. Not surprisingly, it doesn’t fit at all with what your local realtor is telling you. Here’s what Bill believes is the range we’ll see between now and 2010:

Tack on an extra percent to make a guess about what mortgage rates might do over the next four years… putting them around 5.0% to 6.5%.

Bill comes to these conclusions logically. If you want to hear his explanation, grab a cup of something containing caffeine, and read the next two paragraphs:

“For now, the continuing influences of globalization, technology advances furthering productivity, and asset destabilization policies… probably will allow global inflation to remain in moderate range bound territory between 1-3% for most economies.

Global real yields then… should stay reasonably low – perhaps 2% on average (lower in Japan)… Combining inflation, real interest rate, and term premium considerations mentioned above we come to the range forecasts [above] for the secular timeframe from 2006 until 2010.”

Your realtor (and to be fair, everybody else you know) believes interest rates are headed higher.

Meanwhile, the world’s biggest investor thinks they’re at the high-end of their range for the next four years.

Who are you going to believe?

When “the crowd” is so one-sided in its opinion, as it is now about interest rates, the crowd is usually wrong.

I never make an interest rate bet. I don’t invest based on my guesses of future interest rates. But if you were to twist my arm, I’d side with the world’s biggest money manager and his multi-decade track record, instead of your realtor.

Who are you going to side with?

Good investing,

Steve

Editor's note: Steve Sjuggerud is a regular contributor to DailyWealth, a free investment newsletter focused on the world's best contrarian opportunities. We write with a simple belief in mind: You don't have to take big risks to make big money with your investments.

Sign up today to read more investment ideas from Steve Sjuggerud.

Email a Friend

Delicious
Reddit

Digg

RSS

NEW HIGHS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

Crude Oil, December 2006 contract… now at $78 a barrel
Altria (MO)… big tobacco wins lawsuit
Reynolds American (RAI)… big tobacco
British American Tobacco (BTI)… big tobacco
Seabridge Gold (SA)… gold hoarder
Merck & Co. (MRK)… big-pharma
Akamai Technolgies (AKAM)… Internet toll road
Oceaneering International (OII)… Matt Badiali oil recommendation
Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME)… up 550% in the past 3 years
WD-40 (WDFC)… fixes everything
Soybeans, Cocoa, Orange Juice, Oats, Unleaded Gasoline, Propane, Nickel

NEW LOWS OF NOTE LAST WEEK

eBay (EBAY)… online auctioneer
Toll Brothers (TOL)… luxury homebuilder
NVR, Inc. (NVR)… homebuilder
Home Depot (HD)… home improvement
Williams-Sonoma (WSM)… home furnishing
Pier 1 (PIR)… home furnishing
Dollar General (DG)… retail
Symantec (SYMC)… security software
Natural Gas, Cotton

-Brian Hunt


“We are not gold bugs, and our clients know and understand that. We are, however, bullish of gold for the simple reason that other than the legacy central banks of Europe, the other central banks around the world have a marked propensity to buy gold as their third reservable currency.

They are dismayed by owning dollar denominated reserves, as they are in holding Euro denominated reserves.

Weakness is to be bought rather than strength sold.”

-Dennis Gartman,
The Gartman Letter

“Despite the fact that the US is now the world's largest debtor, other nations continue to accept dollars. And the question - how much longer will the rest of the world continue to prefer dollars as their reserves?

I believe Russia has ambitions to make the ruble a reserve currency. I believe China is thinking of eventually advancing the yuan as a reserve currency. In my opinion, it's just a matter of time before the dollar faces increased competition to its current status as the world's only reserve currency.

It will happen subtly, as nations ‘diversify’ into euros or even the yen and yes - to the only real money, GOLD.”

-Richard Russell,
Dow Theory Letters

The Retirement Secret I Found in Nevada

It's a retirement opportunity not found in any other U.S. state... a secret residents of Nevada have been quietly using for years to retire rich.

I recently spent five days in Nevada uncovering the full story. What I found could add an extra $30,350 to your retirement savings in the next 12-24 months.

Click here for my free report.

Home | About DailyWealth | Premium Content | DailyWealth Archive | Contributors
DailyWealth Resources | Research Reports | Privacy Policy

Customer Service: 1-888-261-2693 – Copyright 2008 Stansberry & Associates Investment Research. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. This e-letter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Stansberry & Associates Investment Research, LLC. 1217 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202