US Bond Bubble Bursting?

Faber and Schiff: The American Bond Bubble

by Dian L. Chu Benzinga.com

As I’ve been saying for some time that the bond market is screaming for an imminent burst, now Dr. Marc Faber and Mr. Peter Schiff also spoke with CNBC on Aug. 23 warning of a bond bubble trouble.

Faber — Stay Away from a 19-year Rally

Faber advises investors "stay away from Treasurys as they’ve been rallying since 1981 — equivalent to a 19-year bull run," — when the 10-year bottomed out on Sep. 21, 1981. Faber says Dec. 18, 2008 was the peak of the bond bubble with yield of 2.08% and 2.53% on 10-year and 30-year respectively. (See 10-year chart)

“I think that there isn’t much upside potential in Treasurys unless it’s for the short term. Even the short term is uncertain. But if I look 10 years ahead, where do I want to have my money, then certainly not in US Treasuries.”

Faber’s biggest concern is that because of a weak economy, the U.S. budget deficit will likely remain high, and continue to go up under the Obama administration, which could make interest payments on government debt unbearable.

He also warned against the misguided confidence arising from still strong foreign demand for U.S. Treasurys:

“In 1999 and 2000, foreigners (bought) the NASDAQ and what happened afterwards was a major collapse. I would not look at foreign buying as a very intelligent leading indicator.”

Faber says a better place for investor’s money now is farm land, agricultural commodities, and gold should also be a part of investor’s portfolio.

Schiff — The Mother of All Bubbles

Schiff basically declares the bond market the mother of all bubbles, and noted that when the bubble bursts, the loss will dwarf the combined losses of the bubbles of stock market and the real estate. Eventually, the government will either inflate or default. Either way will ultimately make bond investors go bust.

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