Marc Faber on passing the baton to emerging economies

Marc Faber participated in a roundtable discussion on CNBC this morning about the dreadful figures coming out of Europe (see articles here and here).
At one point, the German CNBC correspondent made a very good comment about Eastern Europe getting killed by a falloff in internal demand due to a severe banking crisis and this being compounded by a falloff in external demand as Germans and others increase their savings. She asked whether over-indebtedness and excess consumption was what caused the problem. Why should that now be the solution?

Faber used this as an occasion to promote his thesis that much of the geopolitical tension and economic turmoil is associated with a passing of the baton of economic leadership from the west to Emerging economies. Whether you agree with his sentiments, it makes for a lively discussion. The video is below and runs about 7 minutes. Take a look.

There is also an associated blurb from CNBC Europe’s anchor Geoff Cutmore about the discussion that reads:

Prepare for War, the Death of capitalism and Bankruptcy of the US Government (not necessarily in that order)

A vintage performance from the author of “The Gloom, Boom & Doom Report”. This morning – living up to his reputation for bearishness – Marc Faber forecast a litany of unpleasant events ahead.

His key message is: buy real assets. He thinks it will take years for the global economy to recover, but when it does the effect of governments’ printing money will ultimately reignite inflation.

“If you’re in any field, you should own a farm because one day you will be grateful that you are able to grow your own agricultural produce.”

Recovery will be slow because government meddling in the markets will postpone it. He argues that the final low for markets and for growth will only come when the debt and losses have been cleaned out of the system.

Unless the system is cleaned out of losses, “the way communism collapsed, capitalism will collapse.”

“The best way to deal with any economic problem is to let the market work it through.”

The Fed is destabilizing, it’s creating “enormous volatility”.

Marc thinks the yields in government bonds bottomed out in December 2008 – rather than lend money to the US government he suggests buying a portfolio of large, quality blue chip stocks. They will grow and survive – and reposition to take advantage of the rising importance of the emerging economies.

“I think we are living through a major transition in the world… the economic bloc of emerging countries will be more meaningful than before.”

“I think that in Asia we have lots of sectors that are quite attractive. The banks, they don’t have the toxic assets that we have in the rest of the world.”

While not an optimist on the Chinese economy near term – Marc likes Asian currencies, and banks ex-Japan. He also thinks the real estate markets are improving. Both Russia and Turkey get a positive mention.

Cutmore follows this up with a summation of Faber’s market calls related to this view. See the link at the bottom for those calls.

Source
Cutmore: Marc Faber on Armageddon – CNBC

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