"All those models you use" to track business cycles and determine your investing strategies, says newsletter and book author John Mauldin, are "all garbage now" and "no longer work."
However, he counseled his fellow advisors in a general session at the first annual Shareholders Service Group conference in San Diego on Thursday, "after deleveraging is over in four to five years, things will start happening 'normally' again" so advisors can bring back their asset allocation models.
Mauldin is president of Millennium Wave Advisors and publisher of a popular weekly electronic newsletter, Thoughts from the Frontline, and is also author of several books, including the recent "Endgame: The End of the Debt Supercycle." He noted in his presentation to a receptive audience that leverage could be "a good thing on the way up," but that over-leverage in the developed world, particularly in the U.S. and Europe, has changed the economic and investing equation. While he argues that U.S.-based banks and corporations have successfully made steps to deleverage themselves, "our government hasn't even started" the process, and that a number of European countries and banks remain highly vulnerable.
He reserved special scorn for the president of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi, repeating a joke that "you know something is wrong in Europe when the Pope is German and the head of the ECB is Italian." He expects Greece in particular to embrace one of two possible "disaster" scenarios: the first would be to stay in the Eurozone and accept the draconian measures imposed by the ECB and spurred on by the German government, whose banks have reduced their Greek exposure; the second would be for the country to leave the eurozone and resurrect the drachma. The second scenario, he suggested, might be the result of the Greek electorate deciding to change its political leadership because it accepted the ECB's ultimatums.
In Europe, however, he believes that "in three years, we'll be talking about France like we're talking today about Greece and Italy now," arguing that what the French like to think of as their unique social contract is unsustainable. Showing that anti-French sentiment is alive and well, the audience seemed to react favorably to the idea of tough times ahead for France.