Street Capitalist: Event Driven Value Investments

Wisdom on such diverse topics as: spin-offs, merger arbitrage, post-bankruptcy equities, global macro commentary and short ideas.


Street Capitalist: Event Driven Value Investments

Howard Marks on Inflation

Howard Marks of Oaktree Capital has a new memo that is great as usual. I particularly liked his point about inflation:

When Paul Volcker left the Fed in 1987, he was asked at his first public appearance, “Will interest rates go up or down?” He answered presciently: “Yes.” Of course, his answer is still the right one. But from today’s levels, I think rates are more likely to go up than down (there’s so little room for the latter).

Reduced faith in the dollar means it would take higher interest rates to attract non-U.S. buyers to dollar investments. And, even domestically, (a) one of these days the government will stop holding rates down and (b) higher inflation would require rates to rise to compensate for the fact that the dollars with which debts are repaid will buy less. For all these reasons, I think investors must consider the prospect of higher inflation, dollar weakness and higher interest rates.

What to do about them? The list of possibilities is long:

· Buy TIPS.
· Buy floating rate debt.
· Buy gold (but only at the “right” price, and what’s that?)
· Buy real assets, such as commodities, oil and real estate (ditto).
· Buy foreign currencies.
· Make investments denominated in foreign currencies.
· Buy the securities of companies that will be able to pass on increased costs.
· Buy the securities of companies that own commodities, or that own assets denominated in foreign currencies.
· Buy the securities of companies that earn their profits outside the U.S.
· Hold cash (to invest once interest rates have risen).
· Sell long-term bonds (and possibly go short).

These are the actions that can profit from – or that provide the flexibility to adjust to – increased inflation, a decline in the dollar and increased interest rates, all of which are interconnected. The most important one is the last one: long-term bonds could suffer worst in an inflationary, higher-rate environment, especially given today’s low starting yields.

One final point: When I provide this answer to the frequent question about inflation, I ask people whether they agree. Usually they do. Then I ask how much of their portfolio they’re willing to devote to protecting against these macro forces. If their answer is 5%, 10% or 15%, I point out that that’s pretty close to doing nothing. The question is whether you’re willing to devote at least 30-40%. Few people are.

But that’s the thing: It’s easy to say, “I’m worried about inflation.” It’s something very different to say, “I’m worried enough about inflation to do something meaningful about it.” Let me know when you decide how much you’re willing to devote.

Howard Marks: Tell Me I’m Wrong (Oaktree Capital)

Marks makes an excellent point about whether managers are taking on superficial hedges — only investing a small, meaningless amount in their hedges. These positions make great talking points in quarterly letters but offer nothing by way of actual protection for their partners.

The best hedging opportunities usually come in the form of missed priced insurance. Nassim Taleb’s option trading seems to fit this description. The most recent example is the CDS trade that worked beautifully during the crisis. Credit default swaps were so mispriced that even a small position offered massive returns.

When things look dangerous, great investors are always ready to significantly protect themselves. Warren Buffett’s hoarding of cash provided Berkshire with great opportunities to invest in companies that were temporarily weakened by the crisis. Investors like Seth Klarman sometimes move 50% into cash if opportunities dry up. That is a meaningful move that protects investors from potential losses versus those who complain about overheated markets while keeping their partners hopelessly fully invested.

I’ve been thinking about hedging a lot these days and plan on having a comprehensive post up soon.

Category: Global Macro, Howard Marks, inflation hedges, Superinvestors, Warren Buffett

About Me

My name is Tariq Ali, I run Street Capitalist. I recently graduated from the University of Texas at Austin. There, I stumbled onto value investing via the school library. I read everything I could and now I'm here, writing out my thoughts and investment ideas.


I have a lot of heroes when it comes to investing, it seems like every investor has some kind of niche. Some, whose books and writings have had the biggest impact on me are: Warren Buffett, Benjamin Graham, Joel Greenblatt, Seth Klarman, and George Soros.


Have any questions? Want to stay in touch?
Feel free to e-mail me at TariqTX@gmail.com


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