How to Find Safe Yields in an Interest-Rate-Sensitive World

By Dennis Miller, millersmoney.com

While Mr. Bernanke’s policies have taken a toll on seniors and savers, his mere mention of the word “taper” last spring did us all a favor. It sent interest rates rising, bond and stock prices tumbling, and in the days that followed, the Fed went into damage control—quite a lot of hubbub for something the Fed was only pondering. What happens when they announce they actually did something?

To pinpoint the answer, the Money Forever analysts and I looked at the performance of utilities, a longtime favorite of conservative investors. Because of egregiously low yields, investors had moved billions of dollars out of fixed-income investments and poured into bonds and dividend stocks—utilities in particular. That caused utilities to become interest-rate sensitive, meaning they began to behave like bonds: falling when interests rates rise.

We recommend holding at least 30% of your nest egg in cash or cash alternatives. Unfortunately, if 30% of your portfolio is earning a measly 1% or less (the going rate on most cash instruments), the other 70% is up against a Herculean task. That portion would need to earn just under 10% in order for your entire portfolio to yield the old-line goal of 7.2% (the rate at which, compounded, your portfolio doubles every 10 years).

The solution: find cash positions with higher yields that are less sensitive to rising or falling interest rates. That way, the rest of your portfolio won’t have to work so hard, and you won’t be tempted to take risks ill suited for a stable retirement.

You might be thinking, “That’s a nice idea, but where are these ultra-safe cash alternatives offering healthy yields regardless of interest rates?” Rest assured, they exist, but as Doug Casey would say, you have to look where no one else is looking.

With that in mind, I sat down with my friend and colleague Alex Daley to bring you some clear answers.

Dennis Miller: Alex, it’s nice to speak with you again. I would like you to elaborate on one of the ideas we’ve discussed. Many folks are bewildered and frustrated, waiting for juicy Treasuries, bonds, and 6% CDs to come back. In the meantime, they are pouring their money into investments that have become interest-rate sensitive. What advice can you offer these folks?

Alex Daley: Those kind of interest rates are only coming back if one of two things happens: if the economy starts booming, in which case the loose-money policy of today will feed much larger price inflation than we are already seeing, and rates will be raised in reaction; or if there is a loss of faith in the US currency or our government’s ability to pay debts from the outside, and investors start demanding higher rates to compensate for that risk. It’s a fine line the Fed is walking with policy, but it could walk it for a long time.

In other words, low rates are probably going to be with us for a while. There likely won’t be a sudden jump. But if we pull off the monetary stimulus at some point, they’re going to start heading back up, because if you’re China or India, do you want to add to your stockpile of American debt?

Rates are already so incredibly low that even the slightest increase will send a lot of investments reeling. When the 10-year Treasury is yielding anywhere from 1.66% to 2.98% like it has been this year, then a 1% jump in rates is a huge relative increase.

Two things will follow a move like that:

  1. The price of those bonds will fall quickly because investors are willing to pay less for that yield. After all, they could find better returns elsewhere.
  2. The price of things that yield close to the same amount, like traditional blue-chip dividend stocks, will also drop in tandem.

Now, if you own a whole bunch of bond funds, you can easily tell what your real exposure is. You can measure (or read the prospectus of your fund, as they do it for you) the “effective duration” or just duration of your fund. That will tell you, in no uncertain terms, how much you’re likely to lose when rates rise by 1%. A duration of 7—about the average for most bond funds—means that a 1% increase in nominal rates like the 10-year Treasury everyone uses as a benchmark will mean a 7% drop in your portfolio.

Generally with bonds, the shorter the maturity, the better they do when rates are rising.

For instruments other than bonds, the risk is harder to quantify. The XLU fund, which is full of utilities—often called “widows and orphans stocks” in part for their supposedly low volatility—reacted sharply to rising rates earlier this year.

There’s one rule of thumb to apply to both categories: the higher the yield is relative to the 10-year Treasury, the safer it is from rising rates. So, instruments that yield 3% today are more dangerous than those that yield 5% or 6%. That may sound counterintuitive, but when rates are rising, investors should understand this.

With bonds, the best way to measure this sensitivity is to find instruments with high yield-to-duration ratios. Those are the investments that recover most quickly from a dip because of rising rates.

So, to get back to your question, chasing yield in and of itself is not a bad thing. There are categories of yield that are relatively resistant to interest-rate creep. But it’s important to understand what drives that correlation, lest you get caught with your proverbial pants down (say, holding a bag of long-dated muni bonds—bad advice I’ve seen from far too many stock pickers).

There are lots of good choices, in bonds, in stocks, and in alternatives off the market.

Dennis: During a presentation you gave at the most recent Casey Summit, you really emphasized moving out of our comfort zone and investing in different vehicles. You suggested Lending Club to us some time back, and we’re seeing excellent returns. In addition, I’ve been writing covered calls on stocks and had some terrific returns between dividends and the income from the calls.

Some readers may be a tad squeamish about out-of-the-ordinary investments. What do you suggest for these reluctant folks?

Alex: Dennis, I know one of your core beliefs is never investing in anything you don’t understand or are uncomfortable with. You and your team do a great job educating in straightforward terms so your subscribers can easily weigh the risk and rewards for themselves. Ultimately, that’s what investing comes down to: How risky is this? What’s my likely return? If you can answer those two questions, you should be comfortable with an investment.

So, take your example of Lending Club. It’s pretty easy to understand: they make personal loans to people; their rates are a little below what banks can lend at because they sell the loans directly to investors like you and me over a simple website; and they don’t have 3,000 branches to support and big margins to maintain. Essentially, the company is much more efficient as a middleman than any bank can be.

What’s the risk? Well, look at it qualitatively first. People can default. That’s the risk. But most people try their best to pay their debts. So only a portion of people will fail to pay back their loan. With the tools you can buy $25 slices of 1,000 loans instead of lending your brother-in-law $25,000 in one shot. That spreads the default risk out.

Looking at the numbers, it stands up, too. It’s why Lending Club claims that no investor with more than 800 notes (i.e., slices) has ever lost money on their investment. As you research the loans, you can find lots and lots of data on defaults to ensure you know what you’re buying. Each class of loan has historical default information, and you can see how it stacks up to returns, and what your likely net return is.

You can talk to other investors on the many blogs that cover people’s experiences. You’re an investor, Dennis, and you mentioned that you’re currently earning a 9.8% return on your invested capital and have just increased your allocation. I began investing with them just months after the company was founded, and I’ve seen very similar returns year in and year out.

So you can understand the risks, even if you aren’t a banker. You can see the returns. And both are backed up by lots of data.

Like any investment though, start small and get comfortable firsthand. That’s the only way to be sure you’re making the right decision.

Dennis: One final question. We discussed CDs and the thought of interest rates going back to “normal.” You said that today’s low rates are the new normal. If the Fed continues to buy our debt and interest rates rise, things like 6% CDs might become available again. However, we agreed that jumping right back in to them could be risky. Can you elaborate on that?

Alex: Carter-era inflation is a good clue as to what lies ahead. Let me refresh your memory.

1977—6.5% inflation

1978—7.6% inflation

1979—11.3% inflation

1980—13.5% inflation

1981—10.3% inflation

You put a great graphic in a recent article that shows a person buying a $100,000, five-year CD with a rate of 6% on January 1, 1977. That person would have had a net loss of 25.9% in terms of buying power when the CD matured, after factoring in their interest income. Investing like that will have a real negative effect on your retirement lifestyle.

As the Federal Reserve continues to buy more of our country’s debt, it will be increasingly difficult for it to keep interest rates under control. Foreign governments like China and Russia will demand higher rates or they will unload our debt, causing inflation.

Finding investments that will have good yields regardless of the direction of interest rates, that have low effective duration, and that are much more liquid than a CD or long-term bond is a much better approach. This will allow you to be responsive to rates without having to sit in cash, waiting on the sideline as the world changes. If inflation starts to rise, like in our example, you can move more heavily to equities, which will see dividend increases under those circumstances.

Or, if rates start to rise first, you can rotate into investments whose yields are rising in tandem. The artificial bond ladders you build with things like target maturity funds, short-term consumer debt like Lending Club, floating-rate funds, bank loans, etc. are tools to prepare your portfolio for the change that’s coming without having to sit on the sidelines.

You CAN sleep at night AND find yield, if you make sure to measure the right things.

As I mentioned in my Tucson presentation, your team is doing a great job of finding these kinds of investments now in places where most folks aren’t looking. That adds a great dimension of safety.

Dennis: Alex, thank you for your time.

Alex: My pleasure.

Grabbing yield wherever you can find it sure is a good proposition… but the fact is that those high yields and above-average gains aren’t always found in the same place. Trying to catch a bull run in a certain sector can be like firing at a moving target.

However, there are those very rare times when opportunities present themselves in every sector we follow—and this is one of those times. Our team spreads the net wide to find yield in all sectors it makes sense, and lately there have been several good investments added to our portfolio.

We, like you, strive for bulletproof income and we have found several opportunities out there to grow your nest egg while protecting it. And you can get access to these investments today, risk-free, by trying Miller’s Money Forever. With our 90-day trial you get access to the complete portfolio, our special reports dedicated to issues facing investors today, and all of our archives. In them you’ll find several interviews like this one with experts from all sectors.

So, try it today. You risk nothing and you will find stocks poised to make you the returns you want, with the protection you need.

 

How to Find Safe Yields in an Interest-Rate-Sensitive World

 

Outside the Box: An Open Letter to the FOMC-Recognizing the Valuation Bubble in Equities

By John Mauldin

In today’s Outside the Box, my friend John Hussman of Hussman Strategic Advisors addresses the members of the Federal Open Market Committee, the Federal Reserve committee that makes decisions about interest rates and national monetary policy. The Fed has been notoriously clueless about bubbles, particularly in the run-up to the Great Recession, and so John would like to help them recognize the currently inflating bubble in equities.

He leads off with the key point that when the Financial Accounting Standards Board abandoned the FAS 157 “mark-to-market” accounting standard on March 16, 2009, in response to Congressional pressure from the House Committee on Financial Services, the FASB removed at a stroke the threat of widespread insolvency by making insolvency opaque. In other words, anyone with anything to hide could now hide it. John goes on:

My impression is that much of the market’s confidence and oversensitivity to quantitative easing stems from misattribution of the initial recovery to QE. This has created a nearly self-fulfilling superstition that links the level of stock prices directly to the size of the Fed’s balance sheet, despite the absence of any reliable or historically demonstrable transmission mechanism that relates the two with any precision at all.

Still, it may ease the burden of power to consider the likelihood that the actions of the Federal Reserve … were not responsible for the recovery.

So he is saying to the FOMC, “Yes, the market hangs on your every word, but don’t get to thinking that you’re the be all and end all.” Ironically, though, when the Fed even hints at tapering its purchases of Treasury bonds, the market falls into paroxysms of despair.

Then he asks, “How does one establish the value of a long-lived asset?” What he’s driving at is that if you just look at the current price of a stock, or at the price-earnings ratio based on just a single year of earnings, you aren’t likely to be able to figure out anything about long-term value. And that’s the fix – well, one of them – that we investors (and the Fed) are in today. It comes right back to that question I’ve been asking you a lot the past few years: Is this time really different?

If you want beef (your prime rib for Thanksgiving on the brain analyst says), this article has got it. So get out your carving knife (and hopefully a few of our Fed friends will have theirs at the ready, too).

These issues are part and parcel of the concerns that we covered in Code Red, which is again on the Wall Street Journal’s list of best-selling books this week. Let me offer a couple sound bites from some of the many reviews:

If you are concerned with protecting the value of your investments, you should read this book – 2 or 3 times…

Code Red is a solid analytical account of just exactly what that inscrutable fraternity of central bankers has done to the world economy and to our individual stores of wealth. It provides an illuminated tour of the mysterious world of public and private financial institutions, and also unveils many of their dubious and outrageous motives. It is well written and requires intelligence to read. It is not for the fainthearted. I found it to be an education. It is also full of wit, hilarious anecdotes, and humor. Mauldin is folksy and clear in his insights. Tepper is brilliant and makes the complicated and technical realm of high finance, banking, and public policy understandable. It is a five-star read.

You can watch a video of Jonathan Tepper and me discussing the book and get your copy here. It is also on Amazon and at your local bookstore. It might make a great holiday gift for your clients and friends.

I grew up learning to tinker with engines and do plumbing, TV repair, a little simple electrical work, framing, roofing, sheet rock, painting, landscaping, and all manner of things when I ran a print shop. Truly a jack of all trades and never a master of anything. Pretty much everything they are doing upstairs as they build my apartment but nowhere close to the true master’s level I see on display every day. My friend (and no stranger to many readers) Bill Bonner at Agora, who can afford to hire any master of anything he likes, prefers to build stone walls and personally renovate old homes himself, creating gardens and such; but I always did such things as a defense against leaky roofs or to pay the bills or because I couldn’t afford to pay someone to do them.

That being said, watching the true craftsmen work on my new apartment, taking pride in the smooth texture of paint or the finish on the granite or the way joints should be made to fit just so is a real pleasure. My perfectionist designer (and niece) decided that the leftover slabs of granite would make a beautiful backdrop over my bed in the new master bedroom, and the pieces of granite looked truly magnificent when bookended; but there were slight gaps at the joints, which I thought were just part of the piece. But today I look in to find a young man (they are all young to me lately) patiently mixing a half dozen colors of grout which he will work into those small gaps, matching the blues and browns and tans and greens and whites, turning the pieces into one seamless masterpiece. He went on mixing his colors, holding them up in the light to get just the right tones, dabbing a little more brown here, a little blue there.

Wiring is now an art form with the new electronic controllers, and anything electrical or that can be made electric has now been connected to my iPad mini, from which any of 8 TVs, multiple sound systems and speakers, lights (LEDs that can change colors and put on light shows – who knew?), curtains, security cameras that are almost spooky in their latest tech capabilities, locks – everything is connected to one device.

The multiple dozens of workers come from all over the country and world. Carol, my general contractor, has collected a team of subcontractor specialists that work together like a precision dance team, selected over the years for their quality and ability to get it done right and on time. This being Texas, there are of course a number of Latinos on the job. The painting crew comprises something like ten brothers and cousins who clearly come from the same tight gene pool. I turn a corner to find the guy who I thought was in the last room working in the next.

This being Texas, and me being me, I asked yesterday if one particularly gifted craftsman was legal, as his accent betrayed his roots. “I think so,” said Carol, “but the owners are and they all have insurance.” This being Texas, most of us really don’t care. Are you a good and honest person and do you get the job done right? If you make your own way, you are welcome in God’s country to help us build and grow and make it all work better.

Many of my fellow Republicans have this immigration thing all backwards. We should be striving to find more young people to come to this country. Yes, college-educated kids with tech skills are needed. But we need the young people who can build and plough and dig and tinker. The country is going to wake up one day and realize that the most important product it can import is young, hard-working people.

Control the borders, absolutely. Know who is coming in, yes. If you come you must contribute and not have access to welfare. But with those caveats, open the doors very wide. That is oddly a big part of the answer to the Code Red crisis that central banks are bringing our way. Someone has to work and pay the bills for a (large!) generation that will want to retire.

And now it is time to start thinking about cooking and enjoying 50-60 people who will invade my new, almost-finished home. You have a great week and enjoy your family and friends.

Your baking cakes and making stuffing analyst,

John Mauldin, Editor

Outside the Box[email protected]


An Open Letter to the FOMC: Recognizing the Valuation Bubble In Equities

November 25, 2013

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.

To the members of the FOMC,

You’ve emphasized the tremendous burden placed on the Fed in recent years, and your dedication to collectively doing right by the country. It’s important to start with that recognition, because as concerned as I’ve been about the impact and economic assumptions behind the Fed’s actions, I don’t question your motives or integrity. What follows is simply information that may be helpful in realistically assessing the outcomes and risks of the present policy course, and perhaps to help prevent a bad situation from becoming worse.

Some brief background

As the head of an investment company, it’s natural to conclude that what follows is simply “talking my book,” but for what it’s worth, the majority of my income is directed to the Hussman Foundation. Academically, I earned my doctorate in economics from Stanford, studying with Tom Sargent, John Taylor, Ron McKinnon, Robert Hall, and Joe Stiglitz, and spent several years as a professor at the University of Michigan and Michigan Business School before focusing on finance.

We’ve done well in prior complete market cycles (combining both bull and bear markets), and were among the few who warned of the market collapses and recessions of 2000-2002 and 2007-2009. In contrast, the half-cycle of the past 5 years has been challenging because of the awkward transition it provoked, following a credit crisis that we fully anticipated. Economic policy failures, departures from Section 13(3) of the Federal Reserve Act (which Congress subsequently spelled out like a children’s book), avoidance of needed debt-restructuring (except in the auto industry), and extortionate cries of “global meltdown” from the financial industry all contributed to a collapse in economic confidence beyond anything witnessed in post-war data. That forced us to stress-test every aspect of our approach against Depression-era outcomes. We missed returns from the market’s low in the interim of that stress-testing, and have foregone the more recent speculative advance because identical features have resulted in spectacular market losses throughout history.

In hindsight, the crisis ended – precisely – on March 16, 2009, when the Financial Accounting Standards Board abandoned FAS 157 “mark-to-market” accounting, in response to Congressional pressure from the House Committee on Financial Services on March 12, 2009. That change immediately removed the threat of widespread insolvency by making insolvency opaque. My impression is that much of the market’s confidence and oversensitivity to quantitative easing stems from misattribution of the initial recovery to QE. This has created a nearly self-fulfilling superstition that links the level of stock prices directly to the size of the Fed’s balance sheet, despite the absence of any reliable or historically demonstrable transmission mechanism that relates the two with any precision at all.

The FOMC certainly had a part in creating a low-interest rate environment that provoked a reach-for-yield and a gush of demand for securities backed by mortgage lending of increasingly poor credit quality (I’ll note in passing that new issuance of “covenant lite” debt has now eclipsed the pre-crisis peak largely due to the same yield-seeking). Still, it may ease the burden of power to consider the likelihood that the actions of the Federal Reserve – though clearly supportive of the mortgage market – were not responsible for the recovery. One can thank the FASB for that, provided we’re all comfortable with the reduced transparency that results from mark-to-model and mark-to-unicorn accounting.

Recognizing the equity bubble

How does one establish the value of a long-lived asset? Hopefully, that question stirs the economist in all of you, and you immediately respond that every security is a claim on some long-term stream of cash payments (including any terminal value) that the holder can expect to receive over time. If price is known, the discount rate that equates price to the present value of expected future payments can be interpreted to be the expected long-term return of that security. This is how one calculates the yield-to-maturity on a long-term bond, for example. Conversely, we can make assumptions about the long-term return that investors will require over time and then calculate an implied price. Discounting the expected long-term stream of cash flows using some required long-term return results in a “fair value” that quietly incorporates those underlying assumptions.

Of course, nobody likes to discount an entire stream of expected payments, so investors create shortcuts. The most common shortcut is to compress all of the relevant cash flows and discount rates into a “sufficient statistic.” So for example, if we have a perpetuity with price $P that throws off cash flow $C every year forever, the ratio C/P is a sufficient statistic for the expected long-term rate of return, and everything knowable about valuation can be neatly summarized by that ratio. Nice economic assumptions about constant growth rates, returns on invested capital, payout ratios, and other factors encourage similar approaches in the equity market. So we look at price/earnings ratios based on a single year of earnings and immediately believe we know something about long-term value.

But valuation shortcuts are only useful if the “fundamental” being used is representative of the entire long-term stream of cash flows that will be delivered into the hands of investors. And it’s precisely here where the FOMC may find a careful review of the evidence to be useful.

The chart below is from one of the best tools that the Fed offers the public, the Federal Reserve Economic Database (FRED). The chart shows the ratio of corporate profits to GDP, which is presently at a record. The fact that profits as a share of GDP are more than 70% above their historical norm should immediately raise a question as to whether current year earnings or next year’s projected “forward earnings” should be used as a sufficient statistic for long-term cash flows and equity market valuation without any further reflection. Then again, more work is required to demonstrate that such an approach would be misleading. We’re just getting warmed up.

A simple way to see the implications of the present elevation of the profit share is to relate the level of profit margins to subsequent growth in profits over a reasonably “cyclical” horizon of several years. Remember, when one values equities, one is valuing a long-term stream, not just next year’s earnings. Investors taking current-year or forward-year profits as a sufficient statistic should be aware that high margins are reliably associated with weak profit growth over subsequent years.

The next relevant question is to ask why profit margins are presently so high. One might argue that the profitability of companies has achieved a permanently high plateau. Despite historical mean-reversion in profit margins (which tend to collapse over the full course of the business cycle), maybe this time is different. As it happens, we can relate the surfeit of corporate profits in recent years rather precisely to the extraordinary combined deficits of the household and government sectors during the same period.

The deficits of one sector emerge as the surplus of another

To see what’s going on, we can exploit the savings-investment identity

Investment = Savings

Investment = Household Savings + Government Savings + Corporate Savings + Foreign Savings (the inverse of the current account)

Corporate Profits = (Investment – Foreign Savings) – Household Savings – Government Savings + Dividends

This basic decomposition, at least to an approximation allowed by national income accounting and modest statistical discrepancies, is shown below (h/t Jesse Livermore, Michal Kalecki).

We can go further. The reason (Investment – Foreign Savings) are in parentheses above is because particularly in U.S. data, they have an inverse relationship, as “improvements” in the current account are generally associated with a deterioration in gross domestic investment. So the term in parentheses adds very little variability over the course of the business cycle. Likewise, dividends are fairly smooth, and add very little variability over the course of the business cycle.

As a result, the above identity reduces – from the standpoint of overall variability – to a statement that corporate profits as a share of GDP are nearly the mirror image of deficits in the household and government sectors. A simple way to think about this is that dissaving in both sectors helps to support corporate revenues and limit the need for competition, even when wages and salaries are depressed. It follows that most of the variability in corporate profits over time is driven by mirror image variations in the household and government sectors. As it happens, this relationship turns out to be strongest with a lag of roughly 4-6 quarters. Given the general improvement in combined government and household savings that began just over a year ago, it follows that current-year or even higher year-ahead earnings estimates may not be particularly useful “sufficient statistics” for the purpose of valuing equities.

A predictable response among investors is to immediately seek alternate explanations that might allow profit margins to remain permanently elevated. First among these is the argument that somehow the production of U.S. companies abroad is not being taken into account. But the difference between Gross National Product (which does exactly that) and Gross Domestic Product – even if it represented pure profit – is only about 1%. The adjustment might make a difference in Ireland, where the gap between GNP and GDP is far larger, but the effect is purely second-order in the United States. Moreover, any additional dynamic that prompts the claim “this time is different” had better be one that emerged in the past few years, because as the charts above demonstrate, the mirror-image relationship between variations in corporate profits and variations in combined government and household savings has hardly missed a beat in the past century.

Valuation measures and prospective equity returns

Even if we overlook the foregoing arguments, a historical comparison of competing valuation methods speaks loudly enough. The most important test of any valuation measure is how closely that measure is related to actual subsequent returns over a period of several years. While valuation measures often have little to do with near-term returns, valuation measures that are also unrelated to subsequent long-term returns are not only useless, but dangerous.

The fact is that valuation measures driven by single-period earnings (whether trailing earnings or forward operating earnings) are poorly correlated with subsequent market returns, mainly because they impose the counterfactual assumption that profit margins can be held constant over time. In contrast, measures that account for the cyclicality of profit margins typically have far greater explanatory power than their raw counterparts.

A few examples will demonstrate these regularities. The first chart presents estimated and actual subsequent 10-year S&P 500 total returns (in excess of the 10-year Treasury bond yield) based on the S&P 500 forward operating earnings, but adjusting for the predictable cyclicality of profit margins (see Valuing the S&P 500 Using Forward Operating Earnings). Presently, this estimate implies that the S&P 500 is likely to underperform even the depressed yield on 10-year Treasury bonds over the coming decade. The same was true at the 1972 peak (before stocks lost half their value), the 1987 peak, not to mention the more severe valuation peaks of 2000 and 2007. Present valuations notably contrast with the quite favorable estimated premium that briefly emerged in 2009.

The raw counterparts to the above graph are what Janet Yellen appeared to reference in her testimony to the Senate two weeks ago. Below are two alternate versions of the “equity risk premium.” The first shows the raw “forward operating earnings yield” of the S&P 500 less the 10-year Treasury yield. The second shows the dividend yield on the S&P 500 plus 6.2% (reflecting long-run nominal economic growth) less the 10-year Treasury yield. Neither measure has a very good empirical record of explaining subsequent S&P 500 total returns in excess of Treasury yields.

As a side-note, the presumed one-to-one relationship between forward equity yields and bond yields is actually an artifact of the 16-year period from 1982 to 1998 when bond yields enjoyed a disinflationary decline while stocks gradually moved from a secular valuation low to the dangerous elevations of the late-1990’s. Though Fed officials including Alan Greenspan and Janet Yellen seem attracted to the seemingly elegant simplicity of these “equity risk premium” models, they seem somehow oblivious to the fact that they don’t actually work.

Why is the historical record of these simple “equity risk premium” estimates such a cacophony of noise? The answer should be immediately apparent. It turns out that the error between these estimates and actual subsequent 10-year S&P 500 total returns (in excess of 10-year Treasury yields) has a correlation of 0.86 with – you guessed it – profit margins. With profit margins at the highest level in history, the record suggests that these models are grossly overestimating prospective equity returns at today’s all-time stock market highs.  Unfortunately, this evidence also suggests that the faith expressed in these “equity risk premium” estimates by Janet Yellen and others is likely to coincide with their most epic failure in history.

My strong disagreement should not be confused with disrespect, and none is intended, but wasn’t it Janet Yellen who in October 2005, at the height of the housing bubble, delivered a speech effectively proposing that monetary policy could mitigate any negative economic consequences of a housing collapse, and arguing that the Fed had no role in preventing further housing distortions? Given the lack of concern with the present elevation of the equity markets, these remarks from 2005 have a rather ominous ring in hindsight:

“First, if the bubble were to deflate on its own, would the effect on the economy be exceedingly large? Second, is it likely that the Fed could mitigate the consequences? Third, is monetary policy the best tool to use to deflate a house-price bubble? My answers to these questions in the shortest possible form are, ‘no,’ ‘no,’ and ‘no.'”

The reason that the Fed does not see an “obvious” stock market bubble (to use a word regularly used by Governor Bullard, as if to imply that misvaluations cannot exist unless they smack their observers with a two-by-four) is because while price/earnings multiples appear only moderately elevated, those multiples themselves reflect earnings that embed record profit margins that stand about 70% above their historical norms.

We can demonstrate in a century of evidence that a) profit margins are mean-reverting and inversely related to subsequent earnings growth, b) margin fluctuations are largely driven by cyclical variations in the combined savings of households and government, and importantly, c) valuation measures that normalize or otherwise dampen cyclical variation in profit margins are dramatically better correlated with actual subsequent outcomes in the equity markets.

A few additional charts will drive this point home. The chart below shows the S&P 500 price/revenue ratio (left scale) versus the actual subsequent 10-year nominal total return of the S&P 500 over the following decade (right scale, inverted). Market valuations on this measure are well above any point prior to the late-1990’s market bubble. Indeed, if one examines the stocks in the S&P 500 individually, the median price/revenue multiple is actually higher today than it was in 2000 (smaller stocks were more reasonably valued in 2000, compared with the present). This is a dangerous situation. In this context, the dismissive view of FOMC officials regarding equity overvaluation appears misplaced, and seems likely to be followed by disruptive financial adjustments.

One obtains a similar view, with equal historical reliability, from the ratio of nonfinancial equity capitalization to nominal GDP, using Federal Reserve Z.1 Flow of Funds data. On this measure, equities are already beyond their 2007 peak valuations, and are approaching the 2000 extreme. The associated 10-year expected nominal total return for the S&P 500 is negative.

The unfortunate situation is that while the required financial adjustment may or may not be as brutal for investors as in 2007-2009, or 2000-2002, or 1972-1974, when the stock market lost half of its value from similar or lesser extremes, the consequences of extremely rich valuation cannot be undone by wise monetary policy. The Fed has done enough, and perhaps dangerously more than enough. The prospect of dismal investment returns in equities is an outcome that is largely baked-in-the-cake. The only question is how much worse the outcomes will be as a result of Fed policy that has few economic mechanisms other than to encourage speculative behavior.

Textbook speculative features

A discussion of bubble risk would be incomplete without defining the term itself. From an economist’s point of view, a bubble is defined in terms of differential equations and a violation of “transversality.” In simpler language, a bubble is a speculative advance where prices rise on the expectation of future advances and become largely detached from properly discounted fundamentals. A bubble reflects a widening gap between the increasingly extrapolative expectations of market participants and the prospective returns that can be estimated through present-value relationships linking prices and likely cash flows.

As economist Didier Sornette observed in Why Markets Crash, numerous bubbles in securities and other asset markets can be shown to follow a “log periodic” pattern where the general advance becomes increasingly steep, while corrections become both increasingly frequent and gradually shallower. I’ve described this dynamic in terms of investor behavior that reflects increasingly immediate impulses to buy the dip.

Along with this pattern, which has emerged with striking fidelity since 2010, we observe a variety of other features typically associated with dangerous extremes: unusually rich valuations on a wide variety of metrics that actually have a reliable correlation with subsequent market returns; margin debt at the highest level in history and beyond 2.2% of GDP (a level that was matched only briefly at the 2000 and 2007 market extremes); a blistering pace of initial public offerings – back to volumes last seen at the 2000 peak and featuring “shooters” that double on the first day of issue; confidence in the narrative that “this time is different” (in this case, the presumption of a fail-safe speculative backstop or “put option” from the Federal Reserve); lopsided bullish sentiment as the number of bearish advisors has plunged to just 15% and bulls have crowded one side of the boat; record issuance of covenant-lite debt in the leveraged loan market (which is now spreading to Europe); and a well-defined syndrome of “overvalued, overbought, overbullish, rising-yield” conditions that has appeared exclusively at speculative market peaks – including (exhaustively) 1929, 1972, 1987, 2000, 2007, 2011 (before a market loss of nearly 20% that was truncated by investor faith in a new round of monetary easing), and at three points in 2013: February, May, and today (see A Textbook Pre-Crash Bubble). Many of us in the financial world know these to be classic features of speculative peaks, but there is career risk in responding to them, so even those who view the situation with revulsion can’t seem to tear themselves away.

While I have no belief that markets follow any mathematical trajectory, the log-periodic pattern is interesting because it coincides with a kind of “signature” of increasing speculative urgency, seen in other market bubbles across history. The chart above spans the period from 2010 to the present. What’s equally unsettling is that this speculative behavior is beginning to appear “fractal” – that is, self-similar at diminishing time-scales. The chart below spans from April 2013 to the present. On this shorter time-scale, Sornette’s “finite time singularity” pulls a bit closer – to December 2013 rather than January 2014, but the fidelity to this pattern is almost creepy. The point of this exercise is emphatically not to lay out an explicit time path for prices, but rather to demonstrate the pattern of increasingly urgent speculation – the willingness to aggressively buy every dip in prices – that the Federal Reserve has provoked.

The way forward

In my view, good public policy acts to both impose and relieve constraints – focusing on relieving obstructive constraints when they actually become binding; imposing constraints where their absence creates excessive risk or the potential for undue harm to others; and avoiding policies where the risk of unintended consequences overwhelms the expected benefit from any demonstrated cause-effect relationship.

From this perspective, the policy of quantitative easing has run its course. It undermines planning, as every economic decision must be made in the context of what the Federal Reserve may or may not do next. It starves risk-averse savers, the elderly, and the disabled from interest income. It lowers the bar for speculative, unproductive, low-covenant lending (as it did during the housing bubble). It relaxes a constraint that is not binding – as there are already trillions of dollars in idle reserves at U.S. banks, on which the Federal Reserve pays interest both to keep them idle and to avoid disruptions in short-term money markets. It undermines price signals and misallocates scarce savings to speculative pursuits. It further skews the distribution of wealth, and while the extent of this skew has a scarce chance of persisting, the benefits of any spending from transiently elevated stock market wealth will accrue to primarily to higher-income individuals who are not as constrained as the millions of lower-income, low-asset families hoping for some “trickle-down” effect. We have seen numerous variants of this movie before, and we should have learned the ending by now.

Importantly, the magnitude of the “wealth effect” on employment is dismally small. Even if the entire relationship between stock market fluctuations and employment fluctuations was causal and one-directional, it would still take a roughly 40% advance in the stock market to draw the unemployment rate down by 1%. Unfortunately, price advances do not create the underlying cash flows to support them, so the strategy of manipulating stock prices higher also involves a piper that must be paid.

As for inflation-unemployment “tradeoffs,” we should all be clear about what the data look like in practice, particularly how weak and unreliable the relationships are between the two. There are numerous ways to plot the data. For example, lagging unemployment strengthens the positive relationship between inflation and unemployment, while lagging inflation flattens the nearly non-existent relationship from unemployment to inflation. One can augment this with expectations, or vary assumptions about NAIRU all one likes. The scatter is simply not amenable to a practical degree of “optimal control.”

This isn’t to say that A.W. Phillips was incorrect. Rather, his “Phillips Curve” was actually a relationship between the unemployment rate and wage inflation, in a century of British data when Britain was on the gold standard and general prices were stable. What Phillips said, in effect, is that unemployment is inversely related to real wage inflation. That proposition holds true in U.S. data as it does internationally. But it is hardly the basis for any strong belief that we can buy a few more jobs by targeting a higher inflation rate in the general price level.

It’s notable that the “dual mandate” of the Fed repeatedly includes the phrase “long run.” The Federal Reserve has not been asked to be “data-dependent” in response to every monthly fluctuation in output, employment and financial markets. Instead, the Fed is asked to consider the long-run effects of its actions. Minimizing the consideration of longer-term risks in the pursuit of outcomes that are largely beyond the reliable effects of the Federal Reserve’s tools cannot be justified by referencing the Federal Reserve’s mandate.

The intent of this letter is not to criticize, but hopefully to increase the mindfulness of the FOMC as to historical evidence, the strength of various financial and economic relationships, and the potentially grave consequences of further relaxing constraints that are not binding in the first place.

To some extent, certain consequences are baked-in-the-cake, as are various adjustments that the Federal Reserve will have to make in order to normalize its policy stance in the years ahead. Gradually rolling assets off the balance sheet as they mature is certainly an option, though the time profile of maturities is not smooth, the strategy may not be robust to material economic acceleration even several years from now, and such a strategy will continue to punish risk-averse savers for years. You already know my views on what a time-consistent path for normalizing the balance sheet would look like.

The immediate objective, I think, is to continue to emphasize that a gradual reduction in the pace of Fed purchases is distinct from a “tightening” – our own estimates are that a contraction of more than $1 trillion in the Fed’s balance sheet would be required simply to bring Treasury yields to 0.25% without raising the interest rate the Fed pays on excess reserves. Having missed the opportunity for a broadly anticipated “taper” in September, and having provoked even greater speculation as a result, the potential disruption of even a small move in this direction is a legitimate concern. At whatever time this occurs, my own view is that even $10 billion may be too large for a speculative market to swallow, while $5 billion is so small that it could make the Fed appear timid. One might suggest $8.5% billion, or 10%, which is so small a taper that the markets would hopefully view an overreaction as ridiculous – which is not to say that the markets would not overreact even then. From the standpoint of a financial market participant, I can’t emphasize enough how broadly the Fed is viewed as the only game in town.

There is certainly more progress that needs to be made on employment and economic activity. The legitimate question is whether continued relaxation of non-binding constraints is likely to produce this outcome without the increasing risk of severe and unintended consequences. This is a question that begs not for verbal arguments, but empirical evidence, realistic estimates of effect sizes, and clear transmission mechanisms. The Federal Reserve has a critical role in easing constraints – particularly shortages of liquidity in the banking system – when they become binding, and in applying constraints and oversight – or at least refraining from further harm – when risks become untethered. The second aspect of that role is far more imperative today than might be obvious.

I hope that some part of this is useful.

Sincerely,

John P. Hussman, Ph.D.

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Oil Prices Picks up from Weekly Lows amid Libya Turmoil

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Oil prices were seen trading higher on the last day of the trading week, as prices rebound from six-month low of around $92 per barrel. While recent data showed a rise in US stockpiles and the turmoil in Libya continues to weigh on the country’s oil supplies.

West Texas Intermediate contracts for December advanced 0.21% higher to $92.49 a barrel on New York Nymex at the time of writing, while the European benchmark Brent dropped to $110.61 a barrel at the same time in London.

Oil Prices – Libya Crises

Libya’s crises has raised concerns as other OPEC countries is expected to boosted crude exports by mid-December by 3% at its next meeting  next week.

Libya’s oil output dropped from 1.45 million bpd recorded last year to 450,000 bpd in October. Libya is the biggest hold of crude reserves in Africa.

The country’s Prime Minister Ali Zaidan pleaded to the armed militants to stop blocking the oil fields and reopen ports.

Civil servants and the private sector staffs in Libya went on strike on Tuesday, reacting to the conflict between the army and Islamists.

Oil Prices – US Stockpiles

Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is expected to keep its crude production quota unchanged at its next meeting, scheduled for December 4 in Vienna and expected to increase its shipments by 700,000 barrels per day to 24.05 million barrels in the period to December 14, reports confirmed.

Recent data released showed that the US stockpiles climbed 2.95 million barrels to 391.4 million in the week ending November 23, the highest level since June, reports from the Energy Information Administration (EIA) confirmed.

The EIA also reported a rise in crude production by 45,000 barrels a day to 8.02 million barrels per day in seven days ended November 22, the highest level since January 1989.

Additional data from the American Petroleum Institute showed that crude inventories rose by 6.92 million barrels for the week ended November and gasoline supplies edged up 201,000 barrels in the same week.

 

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The post Oil Prices Picks up from Weekly Lows amid Libya Turmoil appeared first on | HY Markets Official blog.

Article provided by HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold Bearish on Fed-Tapering Speculations

By HY Markets Forex Blog

Gold futures  rose slightly on Friday; while gold traders’ sentiment this month was bearish with the yellow metal heading towards the biggest monthly fall since June and first annual fall since 2000 on speculation that the Federal Reserve (Fed) will begin to taper its stimulus soon.

Gold Futures for February delivery climbed 0.74% higher on the New York Mercantile Exchange, standing at $1,247.10 an ounce as of 8:29am GMT, while Silver futures gained 1.36%, settling at $19.96 an ounce at the same time. The yellow metal lost more than 5% in November and dropped more than 25% this year, which will mark its first annual fall since 2000.

Metal traders continue to worry over the ongoing speculations over the possibility that the Federal Reserve could begin to scale-back on its quantitative easing program soon as the US economy is showing signs of an improvement. Minutes from the Federal Reserve signaled that the US central bank policy-makers expect the tapering to starts as soon as December.

Holdings in the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust, came in at 843.21 tones on Thursday, dropping to its lowest level since January 2009. The loss in outflows since the beginning of this year reached 450.

Last week, Hedge-fund Manager John Paulson, said he personally wouldn’t invest more money into his gold fund due to the inflation possibly accelerating.

The US dollar index, which measures the strength of the US dollar against six major currencies, eased 0.09% to 80.511 points.

The US markets were close on Thursday due to the Thanksgiving holiday.

Gold Prices – China Demand

According to a government data released, gold imported from China reached 129.9 metric tons in October, the second highest on record; compared to 109.4 tons recorded in the previous month.  China consumer demand reached 955.9 tons in the first ten months this year, doubling the amount seen in the previous year.

Analysts’ forecasted approximately 3.6 tons of gold were bought on the Shanghai Gold Exchange on Friday.

 

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AUDUSD May Reach 0.9205 Before Turning Lower: Elliott Wave Forecast

AUDUSD is again at the lows but we see very slow and choppy price action at the lows so we suspect that wave B), which is a corrective leg, is still unfolding. A strong bullish divergence on the RSI support the idea that low, even if just temporary, is near. We are tracking a possible flat in wave B) with wave C in view that may reach 0.9205.

AUDUSD 4h Elliott Wave Analysis

AUDUSD Elliott Wave

Written by www.ew-forecast.com

2 week trial

 

 

Friday Charts: Black Friday, Worthless Dollars and Why 3,907 Stocks Vanished Overnight

By WallStreetDaily.com

If you overate on Thanksgiving Day (I did!) and aren’t operating at peak mental capacity this morning, then you’re in luck.

It’s Friday, which means it’s time to impart some financial insights and wisdom with the help of a few graphics.

Minimal words and lots of pictures shouldn’t be too taxing. I promise. And here’s the proof…

A Black Friday Trading Alert

I alluded to it on my recent CNBC appearance… This is not the time to be blindly buying retail stocks!

While deep discounts might be easy to come by for shoppers on Black Friday, historically, profits aren’t so easy to nab for investors.

“Contrary to conventional wisdom, although retailers derive an outsized share of their annual sales over the next month, their stocks have typically underperformed,” says Bespoke Investment Group.

They’re not kidding.


From Thanksgiving to Christmas, the S&P 500 Index averages a gain of 1.7%, with positive returns 77% of the time.

Meanwhile, the S&P 500 Retail Group averages a gain of just 0.8% over the same period, with positive returns only 54% of the time.

Bottom line: If you’re looking for a good deal right now, look somewhere other than the average retail stock.

Bye, Bye, Bye… Or Not!

Ever hear the one about the U.S. dollar losing its status as the world’s reserve currency in the aftermath of the Great Recession? Me, too.

While pundits might make a convincing argument, ignore them. The data tells the true story.

Turns out, the dollar’s share of global reserves has barely budged since 2009, even after adjusting for valuation changes.

Want more proof of the dollar’s staying power?

This fun factoid should do the trick: During the most recent U.S. government shutdown, foreign banks actually increased their U.S. Treasury holdings, according to analysis by Morgan Stanley (MS).

Bottom line: Leave the “bye, bye, byes” to ‘N Sync. The U.S. dollar isn’t going anywhere.

Or as Morgan Stanley’s Foreign Exchange Strategist, Evan Brown, says, “We believe that the dollar’s status as a primary reserve currency is unlikely to be challenged anytime soon – mainly due to a lack of alternatives.”

The Great Price-to-Earnings Ratio Debate

The one bubble talk I’ve shied away from over the last two weeks involves good old-fashioned stocks. I can’t resist any longer.

While everyone’s debating how high of a price-to-earnings ratio is too high, here’s an overlooked graphic germane to the discussion.

Since 1997, nearly 4,000 stocks vanished from existence, according to the World Federation of Exchanges.

Where have they all gone? Private, mostly.

Jason DeSena Trennert, Chief Investment Strategist at Strategas Research Partners, says the drop in stocks is “highly correlated” to the rise in assets under management by private equity firms.

Making matters worse, they’re not being replaced via initial public offerings, thanks to the onerous and costly Sarbanes-Oxley regulations passed in 2002, which discourage companies from going public.

Despite the disappearing acts, though, the total market value of all publicly traded stocks since 1997 increased 2.4%, to $21.4 trillion.

Bottom line: More money is chasing after fewer opportunities, which naturally leads to higher prices and price-to-earnings ratios. It’s simple supply and demand at work. May the bull march on!

That’s it for this week. But before you go, let us know what you think about the fate of the U.S. dollar, stock market bubbles, and our random 1980s and 1990s pop-culture references by sounding off here.

If we’ve made you a smarter or richer investor, we don’t mind hearing about that, either.

Ahead of the tape,

Louis Basenese

The post Friday Charts: Black Friday, Worthless Dollars and Why 3,907 Stocks Vanished Overnight appeared first on Wall Street Daily.

Article By WallStreetDaily.com

Original Article: Friday Charts: Black Friday, Worthless Dollars and Why 3,907 Stocks Vanished Overnight

Ichimoku Cloud Analysis 29.11.2013 (GBP/USD, GOLD)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for November 29th, 2013

GBP/USD

GBPUSD, Time Frame H4 – Indicator signals: Tenkan-Sen and Kijun-Sen are still influenced by “Golden Cross” (1); Kijun-Sen is horizontal, other lines are directed upwards. Ichimoku Cloud is going up (2), Chinkou Lagging Span is above the chart, and price is on Tenkan-Sen. Short‑term forecast: we can expect support from Tenkan-Sen and price to grow up.

GBPUSD, Time Frame H1 – Indicator signals: Tenkan-Sen and Kijun-Sen are influenced by “Golden Cross” (1); Tenkan-Sen and Senkou Span are directed downwards, other lines are horizontal. Ichimoku Cloud is going up (2); Chinkou Lagging Span is on the chart, and price is on Kijun-Sen. Short‑term forecast: we can expect support from Senkou Span A and growth of price.

GOLD

XAUUSD, Time Frame H4 – Indicator signals: Tenkan-Sen and Kijun-Sen are close to each other inside Kumo Cloud, they may intersect and form “Golden Cross” (1); Tenkan-Sen and Senkou Span A are directed upwards, Senkou Span B is moving downwards, Kijun-Sen is horizontal. Ichimoku Cloud is going down (2), Chinkou Lagging Span is above the chart, and the price is on Senkou Span A.  Short‑term forecast: we can expect attempts of price to stay above Kumo.

XAUUSD, Time Frame H1 – Indicator signals: Tenkan-Sen and Kijun-Sen are close to each other inside Kumo Cloud, they may intersect and form “Golden Cross” (1); Senkou Span B is horizontal, other lines are directed upwards. Ichimoku Cloud is closed (2), Chinkou Lagging Span is above the chart, and price is above Kumo. Short‑term forecast: we can expect price to return to cloud’s broken border.

RoboForex Analytical Department

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

 

 

 

 

Japanese Candlesticks Analysis 29.11.2013 (EUR/USD, USD/JPY)

Article By RoboForex.com

Analysis for November 29th, 2013

EUR/USD

H4 chart of EUR/USD shows bullish tendency; closest Window is support level. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm ascending movement.

H1 chart of EUR/USD shows bullish tendency within ascending trend. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm ascending movement.

USD/JPY

H4 chart of USD/JPY also shows bullish tendency within ascending trend. Three Line Break chart and Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm ascending movement.

H1 chart of USD/JPY shows ascending trend; Shooting Star pattern indicates correction. Three Line Break chart shows ascending movement; Heiken Ashi candlesticks confirm that correction continues.

RoboForex Analytical Department

Article By RoboForex.com

Attention!
Forecasts presented in this section only reflect the author’s private opinion and should not be considered as guidance for trading. RoboForex LP bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations described in these analytical reviews.

 

 

USDJPY stays within a upward price channel

USDJPY stays within a upward price channel on 4-hour chart, and remains in uptrend from 97.63. Support is located at the lower line of the channel, as long as the channel support holds, the uptrend could be expected to continue, and next target would be at 1.0350 area. On the downside, a clear break below the channel support will indicate that consolidation of the longer term uptrend from 96.94 is underway, then pullback to 100.50 area could be seen.

usdjpy

Provided by ForexCycle.com

5 Stocks to Buy and Hold–Forever

By The Sizemore Letter

Forever is a long time, particularly in the stock market.  The Wall Street Journal archives are full of stories of companies that were once the toast of the town…only to fall into irrelevance or bankruptcy.

Enron, Lehman Brothers, BlackBerry (BBRY) and JC Penney (JCP) are all fine examples of companies that were once leaders in their respective industries. Enron and Lehman Brothers are long dead, and BlackBerry and JC Penney are currently fighting for their lives and may not survive 2014.

Related: JC Penney on Express Train to Oblivion and BlackBerry Chiefs Walk Away – You Should Follow

So how do you know which stocks are “buy and hold forever” stocks and which are at risk of going the way of BlackBerry or Penney?  There are no rules that are guaranteed to work 100% of the time, but these guidelines will get you close:

  1. The company is a leader in its respective industry.
  2. The industry is not particularly susceptible to technological disruption.
  3. Demand for the company’s products is relatively immune from fickle consumer tastes.
  4. The company has a “black swan proof” balance sheet with modest amounts of debt.
  5. The company has a long history of prudent shareholder-friendly actions, such as paying and raising the dividend.

The first bullet is actually the least important, as all of the spectacular blowups I mention above were once industry leaders.  But I include it because, when combined with the other four points, we get the makings of a quality “buy and hold forever” list.

You will notice that banks, retail stores, and technology companies are conspicuously absent from the list.  There is a good reason for that.  With few exceptions, technology companies tend to have short lives, and those that stick around for the long haul do so by adapting.  Apple (AAPL), for example, transformed itself from a struggling computer maker to the dominant consumer electronics company.  But for every Apple, there are a lot more like BlackBerry—companies that fell victim to technological disruption and failed to adapt in time.

Likewise, because they are by nature highly-leveraged and subject to macro shocks, banks are a no-go on the buy-and-hold-forever list.  And finally, JC Penney is a warning to all retailers, even well-managed ones like Wal-Mart (WMT) and Target (TGT).  Penney was once an innovative leader too; its catalogue business was the precursor to online shopping as we know it today.  Wal-Mart and Target were the disruptors that wrecked Penney’s business.  And unless they continue to adapt to fend off competition from Amazon.com (AMZN), they will eventually succumb to Penney’s fate as well.

So, with no further introduction, let’s jump into the list.

1. Diageo

I’ll start with global drinks giant Diageo (DEO), one of my very favorite long-term holdings.

Diageo meets all of our criteria; it’s the leading premium spirits company in the world,  its products are as close to technology proof as you’re going to get, its liquor brands span across all tastes and preferences, its business is robust enough to survive economic shocks, and Diageo is a Dividend Achiever par excellence.

I once, tongue in cheek, argued that Diageo was the ultimate 12- to 18-year play in reference to its premium scotch brands:

Anyone can start an exclusive new vodka brand given a sufficient pool of capital. Consider the example of Grey Goose. American billionaire Sidney Frank created the brand in 1997 and sold it to Bacardi just seven years later for a quick $2 billion. Had he opted instead to create a new scotch brand, he would not have lived long enough to enjoy its success. When the late Mr. Frank passed away in 2006, his first batch of scotch still would have needed another five years or more of aging to be taken seriously.

Diageo’s dominance of scotch via Jonnie Walker and its other brands is a competitive advantage that won’t be disappearing any time soon.  Diageo also gives you access to the consumers of tomorrow; the company currently gets 42% of its sales from emerging markets, and it will soon get more than half.

The stock currently pays a dividend of 2.7%.  I recommend you buy Diageo, instruct your broker to reinvest the dividends, and hold on to it—forever.

2. Unilever

Next on the list is Anglo-Dutch consumer goods and packaged foods company Unilever PLC (UL).

If you’ve ever set foot in a supermarket anywhere in the world, then you are familiar with Unilever’s brands.  Among many others, they include: Axe, Ben & Jerry’s, Bertolli, Dove, Lipton, St Ives, VO5, and Vaseline.  If there was ever a set of products that was unlikely to fall to technological obsolescence or a black swan event, it would  be Unilever’s.

But while its products may be mundane consumer staples in the West, Unilever has excellent growth prospects abroad.  Unilever gets nearly 60% of its revenues from emerging markets, and while that has hurt the company this past quarter, it ensures that it has a bright future as living standards continue to rise.

Unilever has one of the strangest share structures of any company on the planet.  It’s listed in both London and Amsterdam as two separate companies, Unilever PLC and Unilever NV (UN), respectively, and both trade in the U.S. as ADRs.  Back in the 1930s, management found it easier and cheaper to do a “business merger” rather than a “legal merger” between the British and Dutch companies that today make up the Unilever Group.

Don’t be distracted by any of this.  For all intents and purposes, UL and UN are the same.  The only effective difference is that UN is subject to 15% withholding taxes on dividends in the Netherlands, whereas UL is not.  This matters, as the dividend is an important part of Unilever’s returns.  The company has raised its dividend every year for over 25 years and currently yields 4.0%. For this reason, I recommend UL over UN.

3. Heineken

Next on the list is global megabrewer Heineken (HEINY).  Beer is no longer much of a growth industry in the West, but demand is stable.  And in many emerging markets, beer is still a phenomenal growth opportunity and an excellent way to invest in rising incomes among the new global middle class.

Heineken gets about half of its revenues and 64% of its sales by volume from emerging-market countries, and it has excellent positioning in Africa, the last real investing frontier of any size. Africa already accounts for 22% of Heineken’s sales by volume and 14% of revenues, and this percentage will only increase with time as African consumer trade-up from home brews to branded beer.

Prices are considerably higher in developed countries, which explains the gap between revenues and sales by volume.  Heineken sells less beer in the West, but it charges more for the beer it sells.  As incomes rise in emerging markets, expect this gap to close.

30 years from now, Microsoft (MSFT) and Apple may no longer exist, or if they do you can bet that they will look vastly different than they do today.  But 30 years from now, beer drinkers the world over will still be cracking open bottles of their favorite brews.

Heineken trades for a reasonable 17 times earnings and pays a modest 1.8% dividend.  Buy it and hold it…forever.

4. Realty Income

Moving away from consumer brands, I want to highlight my favorite long-term REIT holding, Realty Income (O), a conservative triple-net REIT that owns things like pharmacies, gyms and distribution centers.  Realty Income is very selective in both the properties it chooses and the tenants responsible for paying the rent.

Realty income has a 44-year track record as a landlord.  It owns 3,800 commercial properties in 49 states and Puerto Rico, all of which are leased under long-term leases typically of 10-20 years. To spread the risk, Realty Income’s tenants are spread across 200 companies and 47 industries.

Realty Income has been a dividend-paying and dividend-raising monster since going public in 1994.  In 19 years, it’s made 519 dividend payments and hiked the dividend 73 times. Importantly, unlike many of its brethren in the REIT space, Realty Income sailed through the 2008-2009 meltdown without a scratch.  Not only did it maintain its dividend throughout, Realty Income actually raised it.

I have no idea what the world will look like 30 years from now.  But I have no doubt in my mind that the three rules of real estate will be the same then as today: location, location, location.

Realty Income has taken a beating of late, as have most income-oriented investments.  Fears of rising bond yields and Fed tapering have scared away would-be investors.  Use this as an opportunity.  Buy Realty Income, enjoy its 5.6% dividend, and hold—forever.

5. Nestlé

Last on the list is the Swiss confectionary giant Nestlé (NSRGY).

Nestlé sells food and nutrition products; everything from baby formula and chocolate milk to instant coffee and packaged food. These are the kinds of products that tend to have stable demand, even in a recession. Times would really have to be hard for a person to forgo ice cream or chocolate candy.

Nestlé currently yields 3.1%, and as you have come to expect, that dividend is growing. Nestlé has grown its dividend every year since 1996, and its dividend has grown at a 12.5% annual clip since 2001. (Note: these rates are in the company’s reporting currency, the Swiss franc.)

Few companies in the world have as global a footprint as Nestlé. The company is active on every inhabited continent, and it gets 30% of its sales from fast-growing emerging markets. This is expected to be as high as 45% by the end of this decade, meaning that Nestlé has ample room for continued growth.

I cannot be certain of much is this world, but of this I have no doubt: 30 years from now, Nestlé will still be in business, and the company will be selling a lot more food and drink products than it is today. Its dividend will also be a lot higher.

This article first appeared on InvestorPlace.

Charles Lewis Sizemore, CFA, is the editor of Macro Trend Investor and chief investment officer of the investment firm Sizemore Capital Management. Click here to receive his FREE weekly e-letter covering market insights, global trends, and the best stocks and ETFs to profit from today’s exciting megatrends.

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