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
My Top Inflation-Fighting Stock Ideas By Chris Mayer, editor, Capital & Crisis
Saturday, April 18, 2009

"What marks our Great Recession for greatness is neither the loss of jobs nor the shrinkage in GDP, but the immensity of the federal response to those afflictions. The scale of the government's intervention is much more than unprecedented. Before 2008, it was unimaginable."

- Grant's Interest Rate Observer, April 3, 2009

Earlier this month, I was at Grant's Spring Investment Conference in Manhattan.

This is one of the elite investment conferences in the world. It draws a who's who of brilliant investors... people like investment master Jeremy Grantham... real estate legend Sam Zell... and short selling guru Jim Chanos. I try to attend this conference each year. The amount of intellectual "firepower" is just incredible.


I met several of my advisory readers there. At our lunch table, the big topic of discussion was the inflation-deflation debate.

Inflation, for our purposes, means prices and interest rates are rising, and the purchasing power of money is falling. Deflation is the opposite: Prices for most things fall, interest rates fall, and the purchasing power of money rises.

Over the last year, deflationary forces prevailed. The price of homes, commodities, shipping rates, gasoline – even wages – generally fell. Interest rates keep going lower. I just redid my mortgage for 4.25%, no points, over 15 years. The dollar – perversely, given how our government treats it – has gained strength.

This will be a huge decision for investors over the coming years. If inflation prevails, then commodities, for instance, will do very well. Bonds will do horribly. If we have deflation, commodities will likely suffer, and bonds will do well. Making the right decision will mean the difference between a large and growing retirement portfolio and a tiny, inflation-ravaged portfolio.

"I think there has to be inflation," said the lady to my left. "With all the spending and what the Fed is doing... there is no way around it."

I agreed that inflation will be the ultimate result. But the question is how long between now and then? If we have deflation for the next two years, for example, that will be very painful for many investment ideas.

"Yes," the guy on my right said. "If you knew we were going to have another year of deflation, then you would do some things differently."

I can't resolve this debate here. But I can tell you I've given it a great deal of thought. As a result, I fall in the inflation camp. Much of the reasoning behind that has to do with the government's response to this crisis. It has been more than unprecedented, as Jim Grant recently noted in his newsletter.

Grant goes on to note that the combination of fiscal and monetary stimulus comes to about one-quarter of the size of the U.S. economy (as measured by GDP). And that does not take into account all of the guarantees – of bank deposits, money market accounts, bank bonds, and other liabilities.

Currencies don't react well to being treated like this. Right now, the dollar is holding up because people are fearful... and debts need repaying. Cash is dear. But that will not persist for long – especially with stimulus as great as it has been. Never in the history of paper currencies has a single currency consistently appreciated in value over time. Never.

That's why I recommend you fall on the side of owning "real assets" through the stock market in order to protect yourself from inflation. I like owning energy fields, gold mines, water rights, and the producers of agricultural fertilizer. After suffering a big correction in 2008, these assets are cheap right now. They'll hold their value much better than your bank CDs during inflationary times.

 
Related Articles
Why You Must Immediately Bet on Inflation
Get Paid to Protect Your Savings
 
Don't worry about not having physical possession of these assets. As Jean-Marie Eveillard, the great money manager at First Eagle, reminded conference attendees: "Stocks are claims on real assets; they are not just paper."

The kinds of stocks I just listed – which deal in tangible goods that cannot be easily reproduced – will do very well in the coming years. If you come down on the side of inflation, start your "wealth protection" strategy here.

Sincerely,

Chris Mayer

Editor's note: Chris Mayer is the editor of Capital & Crisis, a monthly advisory we consider required reading at DailyWealth. With Chris' research, you can always count on contrarian investment ideas you won't read about anywhere else. To learn more about Capital & Crisis and Chris' new "personal bailout plan" click here.

Email a Friend

Delicious
Reddit

Digg

RSS

1/3

Portion of U.S. foreclosed homes too damaged (by previous owners or criminals) to qualify for standard mortgage financing, according research firm Campbell Communications.
Do This, And You'll Never Suffer Another 2008
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud
Friday, April 17, 2009

If you've got a winner, you ride it for what it's worth. And if you have something that doesn't work out, you don't make excuses. You don't say, "It's going to bounce back eventually." You get rid of it.

Now Is a Once-in-a-Lifetime Opportunity for Income Investors
By Dan Ferris
Thursday, April 16, 2009

Most World Dominators are past their capital-intensive, high-growth cycle... so they can funnel surplus cash to shareholders in the form of dividends and share buybacks. Instead of funding growth, cash goes to you.

Education Stocks Are About to Collapse
By Tom Dyson
Wednesday, April 15, 2009

On April 1, Apollo reported solid quarterly earnings. Revenues were up 26% year over year and Apollo beat analysts' estimates of both sales and profits. The stock plummeted 16% on high trading volume.

Why This Is Not the Next Great Depression
Notes from a conversation with Alex Green
Tuesday, April 14, 2009

People tell me they're in cash... To me, that's a fear reaction, not an investment posture. After taxes and inflation, you're earning negative "real" returns.

What to Do When the Treasury Market Falls
By Tom Dyson
Monday, April 13, 2009

When the path of least resistance is down, you need to be short. When the path of least resistance is up, you need to be long. Trading stocks is as simple as that. If you can always follow the path of least resistance with your trades, you'll get rich.

After becoming badly depressed, the stocks vs. gold ratio rises to a new short-term high
STOCKS "BREAK OUT" VERSUS GOLD

This week, a little-followed – but important – ratio broke out to a three-month high...

The stocks vs. gold ratio measures how well stocks are doing in terms of gold. It goes through huge, multiyear swings. Stocks did extraordinarily well versus gold in the '90s. It took over five ounces of gold to buy one unit of the S&P 500. Stocks have crashed in gold terms since then. It took less than one ounce of gold to buy one unit of the S&P in the panic days of March.

As you can see from this week's chart, however, this ratio just broke its recent downtrend to reach a three-month high. Stocks are rising versus gold because a world in turmoil is becoming a world in "less turmoil."

We still like gold as a "wealth insurance" asset. But the stock vs. gold ratio is badly depressed. Many people are scared of stocks. Many people are bullish on gold... So we believe you'll make money betting on stocks rising versus gold in the next few years. This breakout is going to go higher.

– Brian Hunt

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