Written by TheDailyBell.com
June 13, 2009
TheDailyBell.com
Investment guru Jim Rogers believes the stock market's recent gains won't last because the U.S. economy remains mired in crisis. But he says the massive fiscal and monetary stimulus campaigns engineered by the government and Federal Reserve could cause a huge run-up for the stock market first. "It's a bear market rally.
This is a fairly complex process, is it not? Additionally, when central banks try to blow up a collapsed system this way, by printing money instead of cutting taxes, they are depriving the economy of the ability to purge mal-investments. By using central banking disbursements, governments prop up all sorts of resource-wasting businesses. At best, then, the collapse is shoved forward to another day-of-reckoning. And that day will be worse than this one. Like any other force of nature, the business cycle cannot be stopped, only delayed. Here's some more from the above-excerpted article.
The possibility of a massive bull market "is one reason why I am not shorting stocks right now," Rogers says. The star investor remains bullish on commodities, so much so that he says money managers who feel confused should consider switching professions. "Become a farmer," Rogers suggests. Rogers isn't the only expert who believes stocks will ultimately fall.
Of course, this part seems a little confusing. Rogers indicates that stocks can roar before they ultimately fail. That's because aggressive money printing can inflate equity prices before interest rates or some other financial crisis deflates them once again. We'll see if he gets it right. We don't yet believe the green shoot theory. But if equity markets continue to appreciate, we will be forced to the conclusion that central bank money printing has indeed re-flated the financial economy (temporarily), if not the real economy, which is much harder to bring back to life. Jobs simply cannot return in a big way unless mal-investments are reduced or eliminated.
Conclusion: Since we continue to believe that this is a very bad recession - a "Greater Depression," as analyst Doug Casey calls it - we await the final act of monetary denial whereby the mainstream media simply gives up and declares the slump over. Governments, meanwhile, we predict, will continue to fiddle with employment numbers and damp inflation data, even while central banks keep producing endless amounts of money. In such a scenario, the only truth-telling will come from precious metals, which will climb, maybe substantially.