The close of the quarter

Here are a few things I am asking myself – I do not think these are unique to myself at the moment:

1. How low can 10 and 30-year bond yields go? 1.81% and 2.87% are the current yields, respectively. Why would somebody want to lend the US government money at this rate when the entity they are investing in has its only escape route in debasing its own currency?

2. How low will commodity markets go? Copper has cratered about 25% over the past two months, silver has been taken out and shot in the past week, and even gold is starting to wobble. How much pain can investors in commodities take before they start getting cold feet and bail out en-mass more than they have done currently? My suspicion is that this is the beginning.

3. What should be on my watchlist that will do the best in the event of a recovery? In the 2008-2009 crisis I concentrated heavily on corporate debt investments, but I suspect that whenever the bottom of this market is hit that investors in equities that are zero yield will fare better.

Too many questions, not enough answers. My outlook still continues to remain negative and requiring defensive action and also of the belief that we will continue to see sharp rallies and even sharper declines. There still isn’t enough panic out there. Although VIX is a quantitative measure that a good sector of the population uses, there are some other metrics out there that still show there is complacency.

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I think these questions highlight your lack of understanding about what is really going on. Deflation. Nobody has a model for it.