Is Soros betting on a Market Crash?
Posted by robertmbeard 11 years, 1 month ago to Economics
This is interesting, but not surprising...
You type: | You see: |
---|---|
*italics* | italics |
**bold** | bold |
While we're very happy to have you in the Gulch and appreciate your wanting to fully engage, some things in the Gulch (e.g. voting, links in comments) are a privilege, not a right. To get you up to speed as quickly as possible, we've provided two options for earning these privileges.
If demand falls while supply is roughly constant, then price falls. Thus, buying power of already owned assets like stocks will fall, even if notional prices are rising due to inflation.
With the Fed tapering QE, this directly reduces demand for US treasuries and mortgage-backed securities, placing downward pressure on their prices. Some bond investors who had shifted over to stocks during QE's artificial increase in demand for US treasuries and mortgage-backed securities may shift back as QE tapers off, thereby reducing demand for stocks.
So, at a minimum, Soros is hedging his bets that stock prices are likely to fall as QE tapers off. Soros may believe, as I do, that stocks, US treasuries, and real estate prices are all in bubble territory and likely to pop as soon as a large enough disruptive event occurs. If that happens, his hedged investments will do well, even as asset prices are falling...
If the USD is worth 40% less do stock prices denominated in USD fall or rise? US real estate prices?
It' a nice e idea, but...
the US economy is probably in a gentle positive curve brought about by Production of oil/nat gas
and gradually making the US more energy independent.
Harry M
Feel free to give me grief with this post if we have a crash in the next year.