One of our favorite conduits, NakedCapitalism.com, has just produced a bevy of citations that make us increasingly concerned about the financial risks facing America. A few of the citations:
- An academic paper reviewing several hundred years of world history repeatedly found waves of sovereign debt criss hitting nations that (1) had received very large capital inflows to support very large indebtedness, and (2) existed in a global context of financial liberalization.
- A list of luminaries predicting worse-to-come as result of household and government debt.
- The risks and downsides of a currency losing its reserve status -- "Debasing the Dollar Will Accelerate America's Decline."
It seems that the blog's author, having correctly predicted (repeatedly) a severe financial crisis such as we experienced since late-'07, has now turned his guns on the longer-term fallout from the underlying problems that contributed to the near-term crisis.
There is a best course: America can reign in spending, and can save its way out of its debt. But the cost will be slower economic growth and higher taxes for years. We'd need to see strong evidence that it's happening before giving the nation credit for it, so to speak.
In the next five years, we think more funds (which have led the way already), financial planners, and self-proclaimed investment gurus will cite "world equity" as the core long-term asset allocation, rather than U.S. equities. Of course this shift has already begun to occur, but it has a lot further to go. We think we're still on the early side of the multi-decade "trade."
Another aspect of this "trade" will be the continued outperformance of well-run U.S. companies with superior international growth trajectories.
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