Monday 5 October 2015

The ills of easy money

The US and Europe have been trying to revive their economies through Quantitative Easing(QE) policies. However, we are now witnessing the repercussions of their actions. See interview with billionaire activist Carl Icahn.

In the past 7 years, the money created has flooded financial markets in the guise of higher stock prices, but have hardly permeated the real economy, or got to the Man on the Street. Property and stocks have been inflated by excess money chasing after limited assets, and borrowing against inflated assets will only make this bubble even bigger.

Note that the job of the Fed is to manage inflation, but not assets. However, this misguided effort has led mainly to the inflation of assets, but not demand or prices. John Burbank of Passport Capital hit the nail on the head with this remark:

"QE had caused a misallocation of capital across the world, while the end of QE last year triggered a dollar rally with consequences that were only now beginning to be realised. The wrong people got the capital — emerging markets countries and corporates and a lot of cyclical companies like mining and energy, particularly shale companies — and this is now a major problem for the credit markets,” he said.

QE has in fact, gone against its purpose, leading to declining prices from an imbalance between an excess of supply from Asia and a drop in demand from the West - Overleveraging has led to overcapacity that is driving down prices (read: China).

So, where will real growth come from? And what can we put our bets on? I will highlight some of these promising sectors in my next post...

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