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Inflation… The Biggest Risk You Face as an Investor

by Alexander Green, Chairman, Investment U
Investment Director, The Oxford Club
Wednesday, March 5, 2008: Issue #771

Investors face all kinds of risks in the financial markets. There is credit risk - the risk that a borrower will default on an obligation. Liquidity risk - the possibility that you will not be able to convert a security into cash when you need the money. (Think auction-rate securities, which we looked at in Issue #769.) Market risk - the likelihood that the stock market will decline in value. But the biggest risk of all is shortfall risk. This is the risk that you’ll outlive your savings. And it is quite real.

Thanks to better lifestyles, improved nutrition and advances in health care, folks today are living longer than ever. People retiring at 65 face the serious prospect of spending up to three full decades in retirement.

That means investors using an ultra-conservative approach, investing in Treasuries, CDs and money markets, are often taking a bigger gamble with their portfolios - and their retirement lifestyle - than they realize. This is especially true when you consider the thief that robs us all, inflation.

All Signs Point to Higher Inflation

The “headline” consumer price index (CPI) for the year ending in January was up 4.3%, the third consecutive monthly reading above 4%.

Of course, the “core” CPI, the one that excludes volatile energy and food prices, shows a 12-month rise of 2.5%. That’s not yet dramatic enough to grab the headlines. But there is likely more bad news on this front dead ahead.

Why? Let’s start with the perpetually weak dollar. The ailing greenback raises the cost of imports, allowing domestic producers to bump prices higher without the threat of foreign competition. That’s inflationary.

Then there is the Federal Reserve. The 2.5% core inflation rate is above its so-called comfort zone. Yet, transfixed by the credit crisis and the housing slump, the Fed has brought rate down 2 points. And stands ready to cut rates further. This, too, is inflationary.

Need confirmation? Look at what is happening with inflation-adjusted Treasuries. (A handy way to follow them is to track what is happening with an ETF that holds them - like the iShares Lehman TIPS Fund, symbol: TIP). Over the past six months, TIPS have taken their biggest jump since they were created by the federal government 11 years ago.

The gold market is signaling higher inflation, too. The “barbarous relic” has been hitting one new all-time high after another lately. And it’s not just a short-term phenomenon. Gold is up more than 225% over the last eight years.

Some consumers shrug and say, “What difference does it really make if inflation bumps up another point or two?” Don’t make that mistake.

With a 4% inflation rate, an income of $100,000 is worth only $70,000 after nine years. After 17 years its real worth is cut in half. After 30 years, it only has the purchasing power of $30,000.

Investors planning for retirement might be unpleasantly surprised to see the $100,000 investment income they counted on generating only $30,000 worth of purchasing power. And that’s before taxes.

Don’t Allow Bears To Scare You Out of the Market

So what do you do? First off, don’t let the bears scare you out of the market.

  • Stocks can be nerve-wracking in the short term.
  • And they can always go lower before they go higher.
  • But stocks are an incredible wealth-building machine over the long term.

For time periods measured over a decade or more, nothing has beaten the returns generated by a diversified portfolio of high-quality common stocks.

As I’ve been telling Oxford Club members, junk bonds sport attractive yields now, too. A raw materials fund that tracks the performance of the Goldman Sachs Commodity Index is not a bad idea, either. And blue-chip gold-mining shares are another fine hedge against inflation.

But don’t bail on your stock portfolio. If you jump out of the market, where will you put all that money to work? In Treasuries yielding less than 4.5%? In money markets whose yields drop with every rate cut by the Fed? Into real estate, which is in a downward spiral?

I’m not saying these investments don’t have a place in your portfolio. But you have to maintain a balance - and a decent weighting in equities.

In short, if you want your retirement years to be truly “golden,” common stocks are still your best protection against shortfall risk, the biggest risk you face as an investor.

Good investing,

Alex


Today’s Investment U Crib Sheet

  • We’ve covered a number of companies recently that could give your stock portfolio a long-term boost… In Invesment U Issue #767, Long-Term Stocks: Three “Best of Breed” Companies On Sale Right Now, where we discuss: AIG (NYSE: AIG), Goldman Sachs (NYSE: GS), American Eagle Outfitters (NYSE: AEO). Check out Investment U Issue #765, Buying Stock in Microsoft: A Debt-Free Company That Wall Street Doesn’t Appreciate… Yet, in which we mention: Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT

  • Also, look into Investment U Issue #760, Warren Buffett: 3 Stocks On Berkshire’s “Buy List”, where we talk about: Burlington Northern (NYSE: BNI), U.S. Bancorp (NYSE:USB), Swiss Re (OTC: SWCEY.PK)
     

     

  • In today’s issue, Alex mentioned junk bonds, too. Historically, high-yield bonds have posted better returns than investment-grade bonds. And right now, there are a number of high-yield funds trading at mouth-watering discounts. The Western Asset Global Partners Income Fund (NYSE: GDF) is one of them. To learn more, see Investment U Issue #727, Junk Bonds: Why One Man’s “Junk” Is Another Man’s Treasure.
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16 Responses to “Inflation… The Biggest Risk You Face as an Investor”

  1. The Gone Fishin’ Portfolio - Get Wise, Get Wealthy… & Get on With Your Life | Investment Advice and Investment Research with a Contrarian Point of View Says:
    August 6th, 2008 at 2:19 pm

    [...] investors don’t realize that their biggest obstacle to success is not inflation, or bad markets, the taxman, or Wall Street. As Benjamin Graham wrote back in 1934, “The [...]

  2. Weak Dollar Rising: 10 More Reasons Not to Bet Against the Greenback | Investment Advice and Investment Research with a Contrarian Point of View Says:
    August 12th, 2008 at 1:06 pm

    [...] Maybe one more cut looms on the horizon. But after that, it’s time to get back to fighting inflation and hiking rates. Futures traders awoke to this same reality once revised GDP numbers were released [...]

  3. Sir Isaac Newton On Today’s Oil Market… | Investment Advice and Investment Research with a Contrarian Point of View Says:
    August 12th, 2008 at 2:33 pm

    [...] biggest risk you will face as an investor, and how to protect yourself in Investment U Issue #771, Inflation… The Biggest Risk You Face as an [...]

  4. Investment U Archives | Investment Advice and Investment Research with a Contrarian Point of View Says:
    August 13th, 2008 at 3:52 pm

    [...] - Inflation… The Biggest Risk You Face as an Investor: Issue [...]

  5. Jim Rogers Exclusive Interview | Investment Advice and Investment Research with a Contrarian Point of View Says:
    August 26th, 2008 at 11:55 am

    [...] they had to bring in Paul Volcker and interest rates went over 20%. And eventually they killed inflation and they solved the [...]

  6. 4 Investing Lessons: How To Profit During a Financial Crisis | Investment Advice and Investment Research with a Contrarian Point of View Says:
    August 26th, 2008 at 3:32 pm

    [...] Government officials are notorious for withholding the reality of the crisis, whether it be the rate of inflation, the cost of war, or an impending bank failure. Big business isn’t much better. Bear Stearns [...]

  7. The Credit Crisis: Just How Bad Is It? | Investment Advice and Investment Research with a Contrarian Point of View Says:
    August 26th, 2008 at 3:47 pm

    [...] Inflation… The Biggest Risk You Face as an Investor [...]

  8. Investing in CDs: 2 “Safe Harbor” Investments Right Now | Investment Advice and Investment Research with a Contrarian Point of View Says:
    October 13th, 2008 at 3:28 pm

    [...] rates often climb in periods of inflation. Each year you will have an opportunity to grab the higher rates if they [...]

  9. The Ultimate Inflation Hedge: Stocks? | Investment Advice and Investment Research with a Contrarian Point of View Says:
    October 13th, 2008 at 3:52 pm

    [...] However, tough language on inflation-fighting is anticipated. Alex Green recently showed us why inflation is the biggest risk you face as an investor, and how to defend your portfolio against [...]

  10. Two ‘Safe Harbor’ Plays Right Now Says:
    November 3rd, 2008 at 10:27 am

    [...] rates often climb in periods of inflation. Each year you will have an opportunity to grab the higher rates if they [...]

  11. Inflation: The Silent Earnings Killer | Investment Advice and Investment Research with a Contrarian Point of View Says:
    December 2nd, 2008 at 11:57 am

    [...] Inflation… The Biggest Risk You Face as an Investor [...]

  12. Investing in CDs Says:
    May 7th, 2009 at 9:11 am

    [...] rates often climb in periods of inflation. Each year you will have an opportunity to grab the higher rates if they [...]

  13. Jim Rogers Interview Says:
    May 7th, 2009 at 9:24 am

    [...] they had to bring in Paul Volcker and interest rates went over 20%. And eventually they killed inflation and they solved the [...]

  14. 4 Investing Lessons Says:
    May 7th, 2009 at 9:42 am

    [...] Government officials are notorious for withholding the reality of the crisis, whether it be the rate of inflation, the cost of war, or an impending bank failure. Big business isn’t much better. Bear Stearns [...]

  15. The Gone Fishin' Portfolio Says:
    May 7th, 2009 at 9:57 am

    [...] investors don’t realize that their biggest obstacle to success is not inflation, or bad markets, the taxman, or Wall Street. As Benjamin Graham wrote back in 1934, “The [...]

  16. Weak Dollar Rising Says:
    May 7th, 2009 at 10:03 am

    [...] Maybe one more cut looms on the horizon. But after that, it’s time to get back to fighting inflation and hiking rates. Futures traders awoke to this same reality once revised GDP numbers were released [...]

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