Posts tagged terry coxon
Permanent Portfolio Results 2008 – A Disaster Averted
Jan 1st
UPDATED: This posting now lists (mostly) finalized 2008 total returns information (interest and dividends included) from the listed stock indices. The final numbers won’t change much.
“The best kept secret in the investing world: Almost nothing turns out as expected.”
– Harry Browne
Investors won’t be forgetting 2008 any time soon. Yet as bad as it was, the Permanent Portfolio survived intact with a profit for the year of about two percent.
The year included oil and other commodities going to record highs. Real estate prices fell at a rate not seen since the Great Depression. Century old banks that were leveraged to their eyeballs blew up and vanished. Iceland, a first-world country, went broke. Bernard Madoff, one of the founders of NASDAQ, admitted his hedge fund was a $50 Billion Ponzi Scheme. The Treasury Secretary and Fed Chairman openly talked about The End of The World As We Know It if we don’t “do something”. That “something” of course meant big bailouts for banks, irresponsible home buyers and automakers (and maybe more — to be continued).
By the time 2008 was over, the markets were down by one of the largest single year amounts since 1931.
Terry Coxon Discusses the Possibility of High Inflation
Dec 21st
Terry Coxon, co-creator of the Permanent Portfolio, discusses the possibility of high inflation as the US economy stagnates. Is it possible? Sure. The Fed is biased towards creating inflation because that’s what they were designed to do. Their worst fear is deflation because their tools are so limited. In my opinion, they will continue to try to inflate the dollar to force people to spend money. They’ll worry about the inflation it causes later.
Will it work? Hard to say. It didn’t work in Japan for the past 20 years and may not work here. Economics is just as much about psychology as anything else. If people don’t want to spend money and take on new debt it’s hard to force them to.
People often wonder why the Permanent Portfolio holds a 25% gold allocation at all times. After all, isn’t gold a zero real return asset? Well, this is the reason. If bad inflation comes the other components of the portfolio will do poorly, but the gold will react so strongly that it’s likely all the other losses will be overcome. But what about a deflationary situation and these predictions of inflation are wrong? Well, the portfolio holds 25% in Long Term Treasury bonds which will do very well under that scenario.