Kshartle wrote:
There is a difference between analyzing a situation......identifying the most likely actions of the participants based on their sef-interest.....making a reasoned assumption of the impact on particular investments and positioning yourself to take advantage of it in accordance with an acceptable level of risk if you're wrong VS. "I don't like the govermment so I won't buy their bonds" or "I like welfare so I wanna buy government bonds".
The first is based in logic and reason, the second is emotional. Just because someone disagrees with you on whether or not it's possible to improve investment returns based on economic analysis of the global economy and current investment prices does not mean they are making emotionaly-driven decisions.
Do you guys not see that? I can EASILY argue that your persistant devotion to the HBPP in the face of the money printing and crushingly low rates is PURELY emotional-driven. I've asked about a BAZILLION times how anyone thinks they could get a real rate of return in LTBs.
I never get an answer.
I get "no one can know for sure......you might be wrong....how can you be sure....." It's all emotional fear of loss preventing you from taking a look at what appears to be obvious. Or it's the belief that you have no way of possibly weighting what the likely outcome is. Or it's some kind of Stockholm syndrome. At least that's what it appears to me.
The condescending nature with which anyone with the opinion that the HBPP is not ideal at the moment is treated is palpable and I just don't get it. To constantly suggest that someone who is shying away from cash and bonds (at near all-time highs) is just being emotional or politically driven is really really freakin lame. I expect it from some younger-sounding members but they can be ignored.
Maybe they will turn off the money spigots tomorrow and stocks and gold will crash. Maybe they'll prioritze debt payments and stop the welfare/social security. If all that happens I will lose on my investments. I get it. I know that. I don't think that's gonna happen so I'm betting against it. It has nothing to do with opposing the violent system. As soon as the taper starts I'm selling all my stocks and moving that money to cash. Ohhh wait....they're gonna taper once they're done printing a good economy.....yeah right!
Kshartle,
Given the bad balance-sheets in the United States, and the fact that the fed is having trouble even generating its stated-target of 2% inflation, the productive capacity that's not going to use, the 3.7% you can earn on a 30-year treasury right now could very well give you a 1.7% real rate if we sustain 2% inflation.
If we have another deflationary crash, we could be looking at closer to 3% or 4% real yields out of our long-term bonds (just the yields/income... nevermind price-gains as rates drop to around 2%).
It's easy... and it's the same reason low-rates have persisted and given the Japanese an unexpectedly decent real return the last couple decades on their government bonds.
I thought we've made it abundantly clear why we think inflation could be very low for years to come... I don't know how we "haven't answered."
And if there is any investing philosophy that has the most balanced-minded practitioners that I've seen, it's the HBPP. Hence being able to stomach gold and LTT's in the same portfolio. Learning about those two assets without the usual hyperbole was an absolute breath of fresh air upon my arrival to this site! We've tried in umpteen different analytical, mathmatical, historical, logical, and behavioral ways to show you why MR lends even more weight to the deflationist argument. Obviously, given your political beliefs, eventually we're going to come to the conclusion that your moral assertions and emotions tied to them are driving your arguments....
.... and to be honest (and I say this with no real feeling of being insulted) it's no more condescending for us to do that to you, than it is for you to essentially accuse anyone who doesn't agree with you on the role of government or what constitutes "self-ownership," or whether that's even a valid logical premise as someone who's holding a gun to your head, or asking government agents to do so, forcing you to do what we want.
You
might be right. Maybe we all have the right to not only own ourselves, but there's some way to assert our claim on property in a logically consistent way, but you act like it's just pure, simple logic, and it's not... and more importantly you (and Austrians) use that logic to stand on a moral pedestal, which can feel a bit condescending to SOME who try to argue against it (not me... I can handle the banter). So realize that your debate opponents also feel equally talked-down to when you do that. Like I said, you might be right, but they might think it feels REALLY lame to jump right on the moral high-horse of perfect liberty and have to argue their positions from the position of being called a slave-driver.
You may think it's "lame" to observe that some here are "politically-driven," but we're not the ones using terms like "ivory towers" to describe the living-conditions of government-employees, or going on moral tirades about the plight of people who CHOOSE to save within the modern banking system, and not hold some other type of asset. You have a moral framework that tells you that you're essentially a slave to the state (as are the rest of us), so I don't even think you COULD separate thinking like that from your investing decisions. HB knew we were really 90% free, and the rest of our "plights" was just us fooling ourselves and falling into traps. This is how he could pull his head out of his own moral assertions long-enough to see how to build a balanced portfolio.
But this post got a bit too serious.... really just trying to illustrate some perspective here, and an observation of mine... still all in good spirit

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"Men did not make the earth. It is the value of the improvements only, and not the earth itself, that is individual property. Every proprietor owes to the community a ground rent for the land which he holds."
- Thomas Paine