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Business/Finance See other Business/Finance Articles Title: Investing in the Age of QE: The Interest Rate Play That’s Sabotaging Your Portfolio Investing in the Age of QE: The Interest Rate Play Thats Sabotaging Your Portfolio by Chris Mayer. Posted Dec 3, 2014. [Ed. Note:Chris Mayer has stirred up a lively discussion with his recent posts on Modern Monetary Theory. Below, youll find Chris addresses some of the questions and comments we received from readers.] Daily Reckoning Reader Question: Even though the banking system is setup so that QE doesnt cause inflation, it does affect the risk free rate. How does QE, if at all, affect how you value a company? Does it make it hard to pick out a company at a good value? Chris: I think that because QE manipulates interest rates, it makes it more difficult as an investor to figure out whats a good value and what isnt because interest rates are kind of the beginning number, right? If the 10-year Treasury was six percent, then you wouldnt be interested in a stock thats going to pay three percent over ten years. Why bother with taking that risk, when you could just buy the Treasury? And so, thats sort of the minimum bar of how it affects valuations of assets. And with a Treasury at two percent, naturally that tends to create higher asset prices. Thats the risk with QE
that youve just created an asset bubble, and youve not achieved any of the other things that QE would like to achieve, like affecting unemployment or something like that. So it does make investing more difficult. It makes it more confusing. I think understanding Modern Monetary Theory the banking system and the way it works, and understanding the fact that interest rates are primarily driven by what the central bank chooses to do, would have meant that you would be less afraid that interest rates would be going up. Sign Up for the Daily Reckoning HERE We will NOT share your email address One of the most common trades over the last, five or six years, has been saying that interest rates are going to go up. And every year they continue to go down. If you had understood how the mechanics of this worked, it makes more sense. The central bank is driving down interest rates, and theyre going to be successful at that. So I would have been less afraid to invest in real estate investment trusts, things that pay a high yield that people were worried about investing in because if interest rates go up, the assumption is theyre going go down. And I would say secondarily, is that unrelated to necessarily what MMT says, if you just look at the record, its more difficult to say that higher interest rates means stock prices go down. In fact, in many cases, higher interest rates also mean high equity prices because interest rates go up when the economy is growing and things are going well, and so equity prices also go up. Its not a sure thing to say that: oh, if interest rates go up, stocks have to go down. If you look at the history, its a mixed record. It really depends. Daily Reckoning Reader Question: When youre looking for a company thats well priced, do you have to be extra conservative now because of QE? Do you need to account for more volatility in stock prices, or a higher stock price because of QE? Chris: I would say QE doesnt necessarily effect so much how I look at individual stocks. Im always looking for a very big margin of safety. Id like to buy things that are cheap, but cheap alone is not good enough. I also want to have an ownership group that invested alongside us that the enlightenment of their interest is with ours. I want a business thats simple. And I want a business that has a good balance sheet, so they can weather the storms. So there are a lot of things that go into what makes a good investment. But I wouldnt say that QE per say has changed that approach at all. Its always the same, something has to make sense on its own, and ideally I want it to be able to prosper in a variety of different environments. So I always think about: well, if rates went up, what happens? If the economy slowed, what would happen? If the dollar got weaker or stronger, what would happen? And I want to find something that can survive all those different scenarios and still make us money. Chris Mayer is managing editor of the Capital and Crisis and Mayer's Special Situations newsletters. Graduating magna cum laude with a degree in finance and an MBA from the University of Maryland, he began his business career as a corporate banker. Mayer left the banking industry after ten years and signed on with Agora Financial. His book, Invest Like a Dealmaker, Secrets of a Former Banking Insider, documents his ability to analyze macro issues and micro investment opportunities to produce an exceptional long-term track record of winning ideas. In April 2012, Chris released his newest book World Right Side Up: Investing Across Six Continents. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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