Sunday, November 9, 2008

Jeremy Grantham: Letter to investors

On October 10th we can say that, with the S&P at 900, stocks are cheap in the U.S. and cheaper still overseas. We will therefore be steady buyers at these prices. Not necessarily rapid buyers, in fact probably not, but steady buyers. But we have no illusions. Timing is difficult and is apparently not usually our skill set, although we got desperately and atypically lucky moving rapidly to underweight in emerging equities three months ago. That aside, we play the numbers. And we recognize the real possibilities of severe and typical overruns. We also recognize that the current crisis comes with possibly unique dangers of a global meltdown. We recognize, in short, that we are very probably buying too soon. Caveat emptor…

Rounds I and II – the asset bubbles breaking and the credit crisis – will soon be mostly behind us, but the effect on the real world of economic output lies, unfortunately for all of us, almost entirely ahead. Employing our usual historically loaded armchair technique, we have been writing for several quarters that global economic weakness will be substantially worse and will last substantially longer than the official forecasts. We maintain that view even though official forecasts have dropped considerably. The global economy is likely to show the scars of this crisis for several years. In particular, the illusion of wealth created by over-inflated asset prices has been dramatically reduced and, though most of this effect is behind us, a substantial part of the housing decline in some European countries and the U.S. is still to occur…

This reversal of the illusory wealth effect added to deleveraging will be felt worldwide, but especially in the so-called Anglo-Saxon countries, and will be a permanently depressing feature of the next decade or so compared with the last decade. It is indeed the end of an era.

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