Jeremy Grantham was on Charlie Rose's program sometime last week. Embedding doesn't seem to work for the video; the link is:
http://www.bloomberg.com/video/inves...suWLXpSRA.html
Some of the things I thought interesting that Grantham had to say:
With regards to central bankers' understanding of the economy and how they run the central banks:
On current stock valuations:
On debt:
http://www.bloomberg.com/video/inves...suWLXpSRA.html
Some of the things I thought interesting that Grantham had to say:
- He sees the biggest problem as that of natural resource scarcity and environmental destruction to mine ever more difficult and expensive to extract reserves.
- He disagrees with the idea that price solves the problem of scarcity. 50% of the world who cannot afford the high prices die which solves the problem for the wealth 50%. He says that China has "made the cut." [China can heave a sigh of relief.]
With regards to central bankers' understanding of the economy and how they run the central banks:
- Greenspan believed the nonsense 90% of the time. [I take this to mean that Grantham believes that Greenspan knowingly managed the economy poorly at times.]
- Bernanke has a more academic view than Greenspan. [Bernanke has got ivory tower syndrome and believes the junk economics out there.]
On current stock valuations:
- Things aren't too bad for the well-run, franchise companies (GMO's "quality" thesis) such as Coca Cola. They are slightly expensive but one will make money in them over the longer term. [I assume 7 years, which is GMO's long-term cycle.]
- Returns in general equities will be better overseas although returns are not good enough to justify the risk.
- There are almost reasonable returns in emerging markets.
- GMO is underweight global equitie, heavily underweight U.S. equities except for the global franchise companies such as KO.
On debt:
- Rose suggested that Grantham agrees with Paul Krugman on increasing debt to get the U.S. out of the housing bubble bust we're in. Without explicitly disagreeing, I get the impression that Grantham does not agree with Krugman's seeming "if it moves, stimulate it" bent.
- U.S. debt up until 1982 was 1.25x GDP
- From 1982 until today, debt increased to 3.5x GDP. [The FIRE economy.]
- Growth materially slowed during this period. Grantham states that based on the data he's looking at, increasing debt does not increase growth.
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