I have always said that if inflating asset prices via
loose monetary policy were the route to economic prosperity, Argentina
would be the richest country in the world by now ?and it is not! The
Fed's pursuit of negligently loose monetary policies since 2009 is a
misguided attempt to boost economic growth via asset price inflation and
we will now reap the whirlwind (the ECB, Bank of Japan and the Bank of
England are all just as bad). One of the main problems has been
the overconfidence with which the Fed pursues their objective. Yet in
the run-up to the 2008 Global Financial Crisis they demonstrated their
lack of understanding of the disastrous impact of excessively low Fed
Funds. Even in retrospect they remain in denial - as evidenced by
Bernanke?s recent book. Why can?t these incompetents understand that
they are, once again, the midwife to yet another global unfolding
economic crisis? But unlike 2007, this time around the US and Europe sit
on the precipice of outright deflation.
I believe the Fed and its promiscuous fraternity of
central banks have created the conditions for another debacle every bit
as large as the 2008 Global Financial Crisis. I believe the events we now see unfolding will drive us back into global recession.
Valuation booms are followed inevitably by busts. But
the key point is that these valuation bear markets take the Shiller PE
back down to 7x or below.
Since valuations peaked at the most obscene
level ever in 2000, we have only seen two recessions and at the nadir of
the last one, in March 2009, the Shiller PE bottomed at 13.3x, way
above the typical sub-7x bottom. In valuation terms the bear
market was not completed in 2009 and indeed after only two recessions
there was no reason to expect it to have been completed.
If I am right and we have just seen a cyclical bull
market within a secular bear market, then the next recession will spell
real trouble for investors ill-prepared for equity valuations to fall to
new lows. To bottom on a Shiller PE of 7x would see the S&P
falling to around 550. I will repeat that: If I am right, the S&P
would fall to 550, a 75% decline from the recent 2100 peak.