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Wednesday 6 June 2012

Five Things You Need to Know: Here's a TIP: Investors Are Banking on Inflation



Kevin Depew's daily Five Things You Need to Know to stay ahead of the pack on Wall Street:

1. Here's a TIP: Investors Are Banking on Inflation
Caught the following headline on Bloomberg when we walked in this morning: "TIPS' Yields Show Fed Has Lost Control of Inflation."

The gist of the story is that the yield on the five-year Treasury Inflation-Protected Security TIPs) is negative for the first time ever, and has been trading that way since Feb. 29. The real yield is currently -.20%. Five-year TIPS are now yielding about 2% less than five-year Treasuries.

What does this mean? Does a negative yield mean a Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities holder has to pay to own the security? In a way, yes. It means if you buy TIPs here you are essentially paying the government to do so because the yield is less than the Treasury equivalent.

Now why would anyone do that? Because TIPs are designed to provide protection against inflation. Investors can still earn money from TIPS with sub-zero rates because the principal rises with the CPI. TIPs pay interest twice a year at a fixed rate and that rate is applied to the adjusted principal; so, like the principal, interest payments rise with inflation and fall with deflation.

When TIPS mature an investor is paid the adjusted principal or original principal, whichever is greater. What the current negative yield situation means is that investors believe headline inflation is going to remain elevated and are willing to give up the real yield for the inflation-adjusted return of principal.

TIPS have returned 6.2% this year, compared with 3.7% from Treasuries, according to tracking indexes compiled by Merrill Lynch (MER).

On the one hand, buying TIPs here might seem a bit like fighting the Federal Reserve, though not in the way one might typically think of "fighting the Fed." The bet on TIPs would be that the U.S. central bank is sacrificing price stability for higher growth, allowing inflationary pressures to continue to build.

That's the conventional wisdom to be sure, and we disagree with it. It's true, the Fed is not fighting inflation; they're fighting deflation. TIPs holders better hope the Fed doesn't lose.



2. Barron's Joins the "Tinfoil Hat Club"

Last week when sitting around wearing my tinfoil hat and pondering the potential nationalization of Fannie Mae (FNM), little did I know I would soon be joined in the "tinfoil hat club" by Barron's. The weekly newspaper was out this weekend with a pretty wonky story on Fannie Mae ("Is Fannie Mae Toast?") and the possibility the mortgage giant may be "the next government bailout."

"Just maybe a bailout of Fannie, in effect a nationalization, would be a good thing," the article said. "A retooled Fannie could pursue its important social mission without the distraction of trying to please Wall Street. Of course, it's doubtful if this happens that the shareholders would be along for the ride."

It certainly appears at least some shareholders have reached that conclusion as well, which is really what prompted the Five Things piece on the nationalization of the GSE's in the first place. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (FRE) are down more than 40% since the beginning of the year.

As for nationalization being "a good thing"? Well, Barron's will have to remain in that particular club without us.



3. The Next Real Estate Bubble?


First residential real estate. Now, increasing signs of stress in commercial real estate. Next? Perhaps the farm. According to an interesting piece in the New York Times over the weekend ("A Global Need for Grain That Farms Can’t Fill"), the flood of money into American agriculture is leading to rising land values and a renewed sense of optimism in rural America.

A separate Associated Press story noted that farmland values rose 16% in parts of the upper Midwest, the largest increase in nearly 30 years. USDA officials found that the average value of an acre of Wisconsin farmland, about $2,250 in 2002, had jumped to $3,366 in 2006.



4. Apparently, We Aren't Going to Just Sit Home Twiddling Our Thumbs Every Day

Amusement park operator Six Flags (SIX) may not be the most important stock in the universe at around a buck 65 a share, but we took a listen to their conference call this morning mainly because we were interested in their take on a consumer recession and what that means for discretionary entertainment dollars.

Mark Shapiro, Chief Executive Officer noted the headwinds right off the bat: "From October 15th to the end of 2007 the stock market was down 15%, driven by the credit crunch, driven by the housing bubble, driven by oil prices, driven by a retail sector that was down really across the board from a Christmas shopping standpoint, just overall it's the same climate
that we're experiencing right now," he said.

True enough. But what caught our ear was the inventiveness in Shapiro's pitch that Six Flags is somewhat recessionary proof. Despite the economic headwinds, what ends up happening historically is the long-distance vacation, the big-ticket items are what get sacrificed, Shapiro said. The short, close to home and affordable vacations usually historically ramp up.

"We just believe that people are not going to stay in their house every single day just twiddling their thumbs," he said. "Recent results from BJ's (BJS) and Costco (COST) indicate the consumers are essentially trading down for specialty stores, they're trading down from department stores, they're looking for lower price alternatives and we believe Six Flags is such that it is exactly a low-priced alternative."

Fair enough. So does that mean the company gets hammered when the economy improves and people can afford to vacation again?



5. Anti-Consumption Sentiment Turns Against the "Good Consumers"


Ran across a fascinating piece in the Washington Post that merges neatly with our thesis that as social mood darkens, consumption will increasingly be targeted as a societal evil. What was unexpected, however, was that the target in this anti-consumption piece wasn't the Neiman Marcus set, but "good consumers."

"Let us buy Anna Sova Luxury Organics Turkish towels, 900 grams per square meter, $58 apiece. Let us buy the eco-friendly 600-thread-count bed sheets, milled in Switzerland with U.S. cotton, $570 for queen-size.

Let us purge our closets of those sinful synthetics, purify ourselves in the flame of the soy candle at the altar of the immaculate Earth Weave rug, and let us buy, buy, buy until we are whipped into a beatific froth of free-range fulfillment.

And let us never consider the other organic option -- not buying -- because the new green consumer wants to consume, to be more celadon than emerald, in the right color family but muted, without all the hand-me-down baby clothes and out-of-date carpet."

The aggressive cynicism in the first three paragraphs is also a bit surprising. There's no attempt to gently persuade going on here. The commentary is forthright and harsh:

"Consuming until you're squeaky green. It feels so good. It looks so good. It feels so good to look so good, which is why conspicuousness is key."

It speaks to the magnitude of the shift in social mood that we may be seeing.



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