Posts Tagged ‘Charles Sizemore’

Pimco Sees Risk of Deflation

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

Featured PostHS Dent Blog Updates

Posted: 14 Apr 2010 07:37 AM PDT

The manager of one of the biggest and most successful inflation-protected bond funds does not see inflation; he sees deflation.

If there was ever an investor that had every incentive to forecast inflation, it would be Mihir Worah, the manager of the Pimco Real Return Fund and the largest holder of inflation-protected bonds in the world.  As the expression goes, when the only tool you have is a hammer, everything looks like a nail.  Worah’s investment mandate is to protect his investors from inflation, so following the analogy, he should see inflation nails that need hammering around every corner.

But, as Bloomberg reported this morning,

Pimco is “underweight” inflation-linked bonds in portfolios that focus on the debt, Worah wrote in a report on Pimco’s Web site….  “There is a near-term risk of flipping to deflation given our view that developed economies have not fully healed and consumers are not yet ready to stand on their own two feet,” wrote Worah, a managing director based at Pimco’s Newport Beach, California, headquarters.

Worah echoes BlackRock Inc., the world’s biggest money manager with $3.35 trillion in assets, which said it is becoming bullish on Treasuries because “there isn’t inflation in the pipeline.” See article.

We’re starting to see some intelligent minds move to our camp in the inflation/deflation debate.  Our view remains clear — there IS no inflation right now.  We continue to see mild, Japan-style deflation as the most likely outcome of the credit crisis and deleveraging.

Charles Sizemore, CFA
Co-author of the recently-published Boom or Bust: Understanding and Profiting from a Changing Consumer Economy

Why Commodity Bubbles ALWAYS Burst

Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

-Featured Article

By Charles Sizemore

Harry Dent and many, many other analysts over the years have written volumes about the nature of cycles in commodity prices.  To summarize those volumes in one paragraph, commodity bubbles are always self defeating.  Once a valuable commodity becomes prohibitively expensive, market mechanisms correct the imbalance in a couple of different, complimentary ways:

  1. High prices lead to reduced usage (setting the air conditioning at 80 degrees instead of 75, for example)
  2. High prices lead to efficiency drives (think insulation in homes and increased fuel efficiency in cars)
  3. High prices lead to substitution effects (switching from gasoline to diesel in your choice of car or from steak to chicken at your dinner table, for example)
  4. High prices lead to new sources of supply being searched for and found (consider Brazil’s enormous recent oil discoveries in the Atlantic)

These adjustments do not always happen overnight, of course.  Depending on the rate of technological change and other factors, some supply/demand imbalances can persist for years or decades, and sometimes the points above can conflict with each other.   One example is rubber. Click here to continue…