Safe Haven (negative yield) --Read the "Hyperinflation Fears" section
Bloomberg --By - Sep 14, 2011
And that's only scratching the surface of the risks.
Many savvy money managers are steering clear of the Treasury minefield. "I wouldn't lend money to anybody for 30 years at 3.2 percent, especially not the U.S. government," says Carl Kaufman, manager of the Osterweis Strategic Income Fund, which has delivered a peer-beating 7.3 percent annualized return over the past five years. Instead, Kaufman is loading up on short-term high-yield bonds such as those of discount retailer Dollar General, which yields in excess of 5 percent with a two-year maturity.
'Scary Ride'
While no one expects a big jump in inflation in the near term, "I see the likelihood of an inflationary shock as a high probability," says Thomas Atteberry, manager of the FPA New Income Fund, which has never had a losing year since its 1984 inception. Atteberry expects inflation to pick up in the next three to five years.
Inker's firm is well-known for its seven-year projections for asset classes, which have been very accurate. "Our expected return is that the 10-year Treasury note loses 1.3 percent a year after inflation," says Inker.
With the likely returns for Treasuries so low, Inker believes that emerging-market stocks are actually less risky than Treasuries for long-term buy-and-hold investors. Emerging-market stocks, which have sold off sharply in 2011, will be the best-performing sector, he predicts. Inker expects such stocks to produce annual inflation-adjusted returns of 6.5 percent. The downside is that they may be much more volatile in any given year.
"Emerging-market stocks now have higher dividend yields than 10-year Treasury bonds and their earnings are growing," says Inker. "Over 10 years, the odds of emerging markets losing to Treasuries are very, very low. But it's going to be a scary ride."
Hyperinflation Fears
Why are investors willing to put up with such low yields? While conservative investors own the bonds because of the guarantee of repayment and the liquidity of the Treasury market, many people buying Treasuries today aren't long-term investors. They're speculators and traders betting on a continued decline in America's fortunes.Higher inflation would debase the currency, making it easier for the U.S. to pay off its debt. Inflation increases the overall supply of dollars, without raising the amount owed. That makes the debt burden easier to pay. "The temptation to debase the currency and reduce the debt in that way will, politically, be too tempting to ignore," says Arnott.
So should investors rush out of Treasuries and into emerging markets? No, as developing nations remain volatile. Arnott thinks the U.S. is entering a double-dip recession and that emerging markets will fall in tandem. For many individual investors, he says, gradually adding to cash is a reasonable move -- albeit one that is so safe that it yields nothing. Except peace of mind.
(Lewis Braham is a Pittsburgh-based freelance writer.)

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