Thu 7 May 2009
Jeremy Grantham: The last hurrah and seven lean years
Posted by Prieur du Plessis under Investment, Markets, Money

Jeremy Grantham’s keenly awaited quarterly newsletter, entitled “The last hurrah and seven lean years”, has just been published. Grantham, who co-founded Boston-based GMO in 1977, covers a lot of thought-provoking ground in this letter, but focuses mostly on where to invest now.
The widely-respected Grantham’s newsletter is must-read material. The first few paragraphs are published below and a link to the full article is provided at the bottom of the post.
“First, let me lament the loss of near certainties in investing. The financial and economic collapse that I described as ‘the most widely predicted surprise in the history of finance’ about 18 months ago is behind us. More precisely, we believed that bubbles had formed in global profit margins, risk premiums, and U.S. and U.K. housing prices, and that all three were ‘near certainties’ to break, with severe consequences for the economic and financial system. All have thoroughly burst and are in their over correction phase with the single exception of U.K. house prices, which I’m confident will do their duty. Normally there are, of course, no near certainties in investing.
“Life is not meant to be that easy. Asset allocators have been blessed in the last 10 years with a large collection of extraordinary outliers. As my favorite quote by Mandelbrot (1983) says, ‘Even though economics is a very old subject, it has not truly come to grips with the main difficulty, which is the inordinate practical importance of a few extreme events.’ If this last 10 years did not prove him right, nothing will.
“Since 1988, we have been offered 8 or 10 2-sigma events. (A 2-sigma event is our definition of an important bubble or bust.) All of these events were bubbles, and all behaved themselves by bursting. Now, sadly, there are probably none.
“Government bonds are the one serious candidate. In our opinion, they are badly overpriced but probably not by enough to justify the bubble title. Global equity markets are still cheap, but in major markets are nowhere near 2-sigma, 40-year bust levels. Some smallscale 2-sigma bargains may exist in the fi xed income markets in rate differentials, but need skillful analysis and knowledge to disentangle from value traps. And, they are a very far cry from, say, the opportunities offered by buying credit default swaps at a handful of basis points on overleveraged financials in early 2007. So, all in all, welcome back to the age of guesswork.”
Click here for the full report.
Source: Jeremy Grantham, GMO, May 2009.
5 Responses to “ Jeremy Grantham: The last hurrah and seven lean years ”
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May 7th, 2009 at 2:40 pm
Thank you for helping us stay on top of things. Grantham published his concerns, which proved spot on, well before the collapse and kept me cautious. Now with data coming at us so fast it is tough to keep up. and bubbleTV and other propoganda ministers thru their agenda driven commentary seem deliberately designed to mislead investors for their own purposes. I have come to rely increasingly on people like you and other bloggers who alert us to critical writings is this sea of information. . . stuff the MSM and others seem determined to hide. Thank you.
May 7th, 2009 at 8:06 pm
A well thought out letter, yet he did not seem to address the likely inflation (hyperinflation?) effects on the recovery, however prolonged. Surely the obscene spending presently being carried out in the US and elsewhere will have a very negative affect on the emerging economy.