Where do I begin.........
Investment decisions are made by weighing one investment against another. If the Fed is printing money (inflation) and driving up bond prices to 300 year highs it will make the stock market a more attractive investment and for some the only appanent choice to avoid certain loss in bonds (real terms). Do we need to cover this or is that obvious?
Kshartle,
Sigh....I was actually about to basically agree with you on that (about stock prices being influenced by people choosing to hold equities instead of bonds...that's Econ 101; the oppportunity cost of holding stocks is holding bonds and vice versa or more broadly the opportunity cost of holding one investment is that one cannot use the same money to hold another)...that's why I asked about the transmission mechanism (and postulated the potential one I did about bonds and stocks and asked if you agreed with it...I apologize if it seemed I was adopting a "challenging" tone when asking this rather than a confirmatory one).
A "slack" labor market as you describe seems to be one that is subject to falling wages in real terms. Companies are required to increase pay nominally less in this environment over time vs. what they can increase in charges....resulting in higher profits. Well.....ok....ask yourself why that's the case. Why is the money supply increasing faster than wages and what has this meant for corporate profits. Employment is falling for various reasons. The min wage is almost a non factor since it hasn't risen in years despite significant inflation.
You must also look at debt to equity ratios. This BS about corporate profits being high has already been slammed by this quarter's earnings announcements. Look at Wal-Mart, group on, CONN, countless other companies. The corporate profits might be at nominal highs....but it's doubtful they are anywhere close to inflation adjusted highs. Additionally, it's EPS growth that pushes stocks to higher multiples and that is a direct correlation to interest rates. Low rates mean more debt financing which means fewer shares issued, more stock buy-backs etc.
Higher rates will slaughter the markets. People will have alternate investments that are attractive, companies will have to stop borrowing to buy back shares, they will have to pay interest, their customers won't be able to buy stuff on credit, etc. etc.
This is a stimulus and QE rally through and through
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Kshartle,
I honestly thought you (as an anti-statist) would be more concerned about corporate profits being supported by government spending (i.e. by food stamps, stimulus spending, deficit spending, etc; just look at how Wal-Mart's profits--or for that matter US GDP growth a a whole--for instance, were affected by food stamp cuts, the end of Federally paid extended unemployment benefits, and by the expiration of the payroll tax holiday, etc) than about the relation of the money supply to them. Anyway, looking at the MZM charts from the St Louis Fed money supply seems to always be on an upward slope regardless of profits as a share of national income vs labor compensation.
As regards inflation adjusted profits (or at least as regards them not being at highs in real terms): This looks like a high in real terms to me:
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/ ... e-profits/
http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2013/10/co ... after-tax/
The second one isn't inflation-adjusted but you can use the Minneapolis Fed's calculator to adjust the numbers from their pre-recession highs (2007...looks to be at around 1400 on the chart) and see that in late 2013 the equivalent number in inflation adjusted terms would be around 1620 or so...and since it's at 1800 and 1800 is more than 1620.....)
Regarding employment - You don't think it's still so low due to slack demand and the economy not operating at full capacity (Correct me if I'm wrong but I'm guessing you don't--based on what you said in your previous post--think the economy is operating anywhere near full capacity)?
As regards leverage and debt to equity and EPS - I am just curious, how leveraged are US corporations as a whole now? How leveraged is the US economy now, counting all forms of net debt vs GDP; net debt being debt minus assets.
Also, if this (the real economy including corporate earnings, not just the stock market) is all indeed a Fed-propped up, on a sugar-high, QE supported house of cards, then why is it not true that as soon as it presumably collapses (and the economy presumably ends up in a recession again and aggregate demand, spending, and monetary velocity fall or slow down) that rates will be higher and not lower? Economic recessions don't typically lead to higher rates (having said that, if the economy does improve, I do expect rates will head higher).
EDIT: Just to be clear, I'm NOT saying that rate increases wouldn't both adversely effect equity prices and hurt companies that had borrowed heavily (assuming floating rate debt was how they'd borrowed), just that huge rate increases don't (barring premature tightening by the Fed) seem too likely any time soon with so much slack still in the economy....now, if for instance, the Fed blundered and for some reason decided to do something like raise short-term rates to 5 or 6% immediately tomorrow (not that I think the Yellen Fed will take them that high for a long while), then yeah, I think the market would nosedive; the question is why they would choose to raise short-tem rates that high with long-term unemployment (and just unemployment in general) still so elevated and inflation still (relatively) low.
Finally, I know you hold a lot of gold (percentage wise as a percent of your portfolio) and had earlier mentioned gold as a way to quasi-short the market; however, if you are right and rates spike higher than inflation and stay there for a while you don't worry that that will be a negative for your portfolio (considering gold's performance correlation to negative real rates and its not typically doing so hot when real rates are rising and positive)? If you truly expect higher rates (and fairly soon), then why do you still hold mostly gold in your portfolio? Is it because you think rates will be higher but inflation will be higher still (so even if nominal rates were to rise to, say, 7 or 8%, they would still be negative in real terms)?