How to Make 20 to 30 Times Your Money on the Coming Inflation
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ContrarianProfits/~3/u9x5XfvoM1g/17544Posted on Thursday, June 4th, 2009 | In Market Commentary
Hedge fund legend Julian Robertson is betting the farm against long-dated US Treasurys. As Notes readers will be aware, we have been banging the drum on the vulnerability of long-dated US debt for over a month now. But Robertson, of Tiger Management fame, has a different way to make this short long-term Treasurys play (hat tip Market Folly).
Robertson is shorting long-dated US debt using something called a steepener swap play. Although the mechanism of this trade may be unfamiliar, at heart it’s a simple bet on inflation.
Robertson reckons inflation could easily hit 7% and that it could even reach 18%. Again, Notes readers will be familiar with this market script. This from eFinancialNews:
Steepeners are a type of interest rate swap, where one party agrees to pay the other a fixed rate in exchange for a floating rate, which is derived from the difference between long and short term rates. Many of these products also use high leverage, where the difference between the two rates is multiplied by up to 50 times to produce a higher return.
Retail investors can make the same play as Robertson without using interest rate swaps. It’s actually very straightforward.
Robertson is betting on the yield curve steepening. This happens when the difference between the yields of short-term and long-term US Treasurys increases. Robertson is essentially short the price of long-term US Treasurys and long the price of short-term US Treasurys.
Anyone with a brokerage account can do this by buying the iShares Barclays 1-3 Year Treas.Bd ETF (NYSE: SHY) and shorting the iShares Barclays 7-10 Year Treas.Bd ETF (NYSE: IEF). This would give you a leveraged return on an inflationary future, which not only Robertson but also many other underground investors we know are betting on.
Robertson reckons China and Japan will stop buying US government debt as the dollar weakens. This would bring down the price of 10-year T-notes and cause the yield to shoot up.
Of course, the reason Robertson is so sure that inflation is on the horizon is the Fed’s quantitative easing ‘solution’ to the economic crisis, aka the printing money route, combined with the enormous pressure on US Treasurys right now.
I’m amazed at the amount of money the government is throwing at this thing. You don’t even react anymore unless somebody’s talking about $1 trillion. I genuinely admire the administration’s courage in doing what it’s doing, but not the wisdom of it. I look at the TALF (Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility) program, for example, and it’s almost a bribe to get people to put on more leverage … I ask anyone to give me an example of an economy beefed up by huge amounts of quantitative easing that did not inflate tremendously when or if the economy improved . I think what we’re doing now will either fail, or it will result in unbelievably high inflation – and tragically, maybe both. That would mean a depression and explosive inflation, which is frightening.
Even the mainstream media has started to pick up on the threat of inflation. How can you hedge against it other than by shorting long-dated government debt? Here’s what the Wall Street Journal recommends:
1. A managed gold fund such as Tocqueville Gold (TGLDX) or US Global Investors World Precious Minerals (UNWPX). This is a lower-risk alternative to buying gold directly, since the metal itself can be volatile.
2. A mutual fund that bets on long-term interest rates rising. The two best known are the ProFunds Rising Rates Opportunity fund (RRPIX) and the Rydex Inverse Government Long Bond Strategy fund (RYJUX).
3. An absolute return fund that can use derivatives and aims to beat inflation. An example: MFS Diversified Target Return (DVRAX), which aims to beat inflation over 5% a year over a market cycle. The problem: there are no guarantees. Many of these funds are new. And the track record is too short to judge.
4. Refinance your house into a new 30-year fixed mortgage immediately. Rates currently average about 5.32%. If inflation surges, rates will too.
5. Sell long-term bonds. A bond guaranteeing 7% a year for 30 years won’t be worth much if inflation hits 10% and CDs start paying 11%. Treasury bonds have sold off sharply. But corporate bonds haven’t. The yield gap between long-term investment grade corporates and 30-year Treasurys, which was nearly 5% in mid-January, has fallen to 3.5%.
6. If you want guarantees, buy inflation-protected Treasury bonds (TIPS). Right now, the 20-year TIPS yield is about 2.4% over inflation.
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