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Archives for July 2022

Do Governments Cause Recessions On Purpose?

July 28, 2022 By Richard Young

That’s a question I put to readers back in 1988, and which is now relevant to today’s economy. The Federal Reserve is rapidly raising rates, and that is good news for savers who want to invest in bonds with decent interest rates, but the implications for the greater economy are also noteworthy. Here’s what I wrote in response to that question then:

Do Governments Cause Recessions On Purpose?

A recession is a prospect in the second half of 1989 because smart presidents realize that it’s tough to get re-elected if the public is dealt a recession before a presidential election year. It’s wise to take the recession medicine in the first year of a new term. I can’t overemphasize this point. Ike and Jimmy Carter fouled up and dropped a recession on voters’ plates in the final year of a presidential term. The result: neither’s respective party was re-elected. Over and over again, recessions begin in the first year of a four-year presidential term. I see no reason why things should be different this time around.

“Wait a minute,” you ask. “Are you saying, Young, that governments cause recession on purpose?” Oh, yes! And here is adequate evidence to support this view.

For openers, the gentlemen who control the money switches at the Fed can throw the economy on a recession course by slowing the money supply growth and raising short-term interest rates. And if you have missed it, that is precisely what has been going on over the past year.

M2 growth has been cut from 7% to 1%. High powered money (currency and bank reserves) growth has been cut sharply, and for good medicine, interest rates have been forced up literally from the day 1988 got under way. Your most important benchmark rates, the rates on 90-day CDs and 90-day T-bills, have soared in 1988 even though you were told by an unfortunately large number of advisors and brokers that just the reverse would occur in 1988. The 90-day CD rate has gone through the roof, climbing to 8.5% from 6.6% last February. You can now get 8% on risk-free 90-day T-bills versus only 5.6% last February. Some rate decline, wasn’t it!

So is Joe Biden attempting to avoid the mistake made by Carter, to whom he is so often compared? It’s too late to take a recession in his first year, but it’s better now than later.

Of Biden’s intentions, your guess is as good as mine. What shouldn’t be in doubt is the ability of the Federal Reserve to drive the economy into recession. As I wrote, “the Fed can throw the economy on a recession course by slowing the money supply growth and raising short-term interest rates.” Take a look at my chart of M2 going back to 1985 below:

You can see that not only has M2 growth slowed, but it has also begun to decline. This is a significant event for the economy.

Now take a look at the Fed Funds Target Rate with recessions shaded over in grey (below). As you can see, a recession occurred shortly after nearly every significant increase in the Fed Funds rate.

The Fed has both slowed the growth of the money supply and raised short-term interest rates. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell may say there’s no recession and that the Advance GDP estimate should be “taken with a grain of salt,” but only history can sit in judgment of those statements.

Filed Under: Market Forecast Tagged With: comp

My Battle-Hardened Stock Market Strategy for the Worst of Times

July 26, 2022 By Richard Young

UPDATE 7.26.22: Have the worst of times come? It’s hard to say, but many investors who were feeling great about the market only six months ago are now terrified. If investors had employed the Ben Graham-inspired, battle-hardened strategy of conservation of principal and a defensive portfolio, they may not be so unsure of themselves today.

Originally posted on August 14, 2019.

In September of 2014, I explained to readers my battle-hardened strategy for dealing with the worst of times in the stock market. My strategy was inspired by Ben Graham, and I have used it throughout my 55-year career in investing. Here’s how it goes:

Ben Graham’s The Intelligent Investor was first published in 1949. I came in a little late in the game with my 1973 edition, which I have in front of me as I write. It is important to me that you and all of our management clients are able to sleep well, even during the periodic stock market busts that we all have to ride through from time to time. I never get out of the market; thus, I require a battle-hardened strategy to stay the course during even the worst of times. Ben Graham wrote, “An investment operation is one which, upon thorough analysis, promises safety of principal and an adequate return. Operations not meeting these requirements are speculative.” From day one, I have stuck to Ben’s foundation principle to the benefit of all our subs and clients.

Primary Concern: Conserve Principal

Ben built on his foundation principle by writing that truly professional investment advisors are quite modest in their promises and pretensions. As he noted, “The leading investment-counsel firms make no claim to being brilliant, but they do pride themselves on being careful, conservative, and competent. The primary aim is to conserve the principal value over the years and to produce a conservatively acceptable rate of return. Any accomplishment beyond that—and they do strive to better the goal— they regard in the nature of extra service rendered. Perhaps the chief value to clients lies in shielding them from costly mistakes.”

The Defensive Investor

I like to think that it is just this approach that allows our subscribers and clients to sleep well and remain comfortable that we are all on the same team. Part of the complete program is your portfolio balance. Ben Graham wrote, “We have already outlined in briefest form the portfolio policy of the defensive investor. He should divide his funds between high-grade bonds and high-grade common stocks. We have suggested as a fundamental guiding rule that the investor should never have less than 25% or more than 75% of his funds in common stocks, with a consequent inverse range of between 75% and 25% in bonds.”

With market volatility increasing, it’s time you reviewed your own strategy. You should consider a battle-hardened strategy that will protect you in the “worst of times.”

Filed Under: Investing Strategies

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