Friday, September 11, 2009

Faber Says ‘High’ U.S. Deficit Will Spur Inflation

By Elizabeth Campbell and Millie Munshi

Sept. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Investor Marc Faber said government spending and low interest rates will keep the U.S. deficit “very high” and will spur inflation.

Interest rates will be kept “artificially low” and remain “near zero for a long time” in the U.S., Faber, the publisher of the Gloom, Boom & Doom report, said today in a presentation broadcast on the Internet. “The deficit will stay very high and that will create some kind of more inflation down the road.”

The Federal Reserve is likely to continue to “print money” in an effort to boost the U.S. economy, and that, combined with low interest rates, will spur weakness in the dollar, Faber said. U.S. President Barack Obama has pumped up the nation’s marketable debt to an unprecedented $6.94 trillion as he borrows to spur the world’s largest economy.

“Money printing will be unprecedented because the deficit will need to be financed,” Faber said. “The weaker the economy, the more the stock market will go up because the money that is being printed will go into” speculative assets.

Faber, who recommended buying U.S. stocks in October, before the biggest rally in more than 70 years, said investors should buy equities instead of bonds or holding cash.

“If the dollar is weak, there is a very good chance that equity prices could rise quite substantially,” Faber said. A weaker dollar is “good for asset prices.”

Buying Commodities

Faber also recommends that investors buy precious metals and other raw materials to hedge against declines in the U.S. currency. Before today, the greenback slid 4.9 percent against a basket of six major currencies this year and the 19-commodity Reuters/Jefferies CRB Index climbed 10 percent.

“The dollar will continue to implode against commodities,” Faber said. “I don’t see why someone would hold dollars and not own gold. More and more people will come to the realization that they have to own some resources, some commodities, some mining companies and some physical precious metals.”

Global economic growth won’t recover to pre-recession levels, Faber said.

“I don’t think consumption will come back,” he said. “I don’t think there is much of a recovery. You have to differentiate between the stock market and economy activity.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Elizabeth Campbell in New York at ecampbell14@bloomberg.net; Millie Munshi in New York at mmunshi@bloomberg.net.

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