Wednesday, May 19, 2021

Letting It Fly

Time keeps on slippin,' slippin,' slippin'
Into the future

--Steve Miller

The always insightful Stan Druckenmiller zooms with the USC student investment fund group. In the first 20 minutes he offers prepared remarks, primarily concerning his current macro view, while the remainder is Q&A.

Druck lets it fly in part one. After unprecedented monetary and fiscal intervention in response to CV19 last spring, he contends that both the federal government and the Fed are being reckless on a historic scale by continuing to pump stimulus into the system after indicators show that the economy no longer needs assistance. Debt has exploded and prices are rising. He is preparing his family trust fund (a few $billion large) for Big Inflation with bets against the US dollar and on commodities. 

Although he remains long stocks, Druck says that he'll be surprised if he isn't out of equities before year end. I'm not sure whether he thinks inflation will hurt stocks or whether he believes prices are too high (he mentioned that he sees bubbles in nearly all assets classes).

Several interesting notes from the Q&A. On lessons learned from his mentors, Druck highlighted the advice he received about envisioning what things will look like in 1-2 years rather than where things are today. Today has already been priced in. Also enjoyed the Soros story about sizing positionss accordingly. Attractive opportunities should be well funded.

Re digital currencies, he suspects that the dollar et al will be headed electronic. However, he isn't keen on Bitcoin or its brethren being the chosen one.

On unequal wealth distribution, Druck suggests there has been no greater facilitator than central banks--a point these pages has made before.

In prepping for inflation, was surprised there were no questions or comments on gold. I'll take that as a bullish contrarian indicator...

His remarks on shorting also surprised me. While the last 10-12 years have been 'miserable' on the short side, Druck said that recently his shorts have been doing better than his longs. Moreover, given the historic macro situation, he suspects that upcoming years may be very friendly to shorting assets that are wildly overpriced. 

This inspired me to start thinking about setting aside modest short side space in my taxable account for some put projects. Also set up a short candidate watch list. 

position in gold 

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