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Betting On Buffett
By Bill Bonner | Published  06/10/2008 | Currency , Futures , Options , Stocks | Unrated
Betting On Buffett

Let's begin with the news…and then a bet.

First, the stock market bounced yesterday…following Friday's fall. The Dow rose 70 points. The dollar bounced a little too - closing at $1.56 per euro. Gold held steady at $898. And oil gave up $4.

Now the bet…

Fortune magazine reports that Warren Buffett has bet a hedge fund management business that it will not outperform the S&P 500 over the next 10 years. The firm, Protégé, is in the business of running hedge funds, and has done well. Since 2002, it has made investors 95% on their money - after fees. By comparison the S&P 500 is up only 64%.

But Buffett is confident that the combination of high fees and regression to the mean will doom Protégé. So the two bought a 10-year zero coupon Treasury bond. At a cost of $320,000, the bond will be worth $1 million when the 10 years are up and will be given to the charity of the winner's choice.

Who will win?

Our money is on Buffett. We've described in these pages why hedge funds are a losing proposition for investors. Over time, the managers' performance regresses to the mean of all investment advisors - which is to say, he gets about the same as the broad market itself. And over time, the effect of taking out large fees to pay the managers - typically, 2% of principal and 20% of performance - reduces the investor's capital.

Mathematically, if you leave your money in a hedge fund long enough it will all end up with the manager.

But we will make a further wager: we bet that both bettors will lose. Here's why:

The have bought a Treasury bond.

We did not look this morning, but the last time we took note of it, the yield on the 10-year Treasury was less than 4%. And the last time we looked, the official consumer inflation rate in the United States was over 4%. Of course, that's just the beginning of the inflation story. The real cost of living is going up faster than the Labor Department numbers tell. Producer prices…import prices…raw material prices…oil prices - all the numbers that eventually make up the CPI are going up much faster than the official CPI rate itself. And every time anyone from outside the government tries to calculate consumer inflation, he comes up with a number considerably higher than those Labor Department statisticians give us. For example, when newspaper reporters bought the ingredients for a traditional Memorial Day cookout, they found them about 10% more expensive than a year before.

Inflation has gone global. It's officially 8.5% in China. In Russia, it's 14%. In Vietnam, it's 24%. And in Zimbabwe - it's gone to the moon.

How is it possible that inflation in the United States - which imports so much stuff from the rest of the world - can remain so low? "Seasonal adjustments" is the standard explanation.

But the seasons change. Our guess is that cold winds will soon blow across the borderline…and those greenback leaves will turn brown…curl up…and blow away.

Ben Bernanke and Hank Paulson both announced that a strong dollar was something America wanted. Bernanke even led investors to believe that perhaps rate hikes would follow. But then, last week, the unemployment rate in America jumped to 5.5%, its biggest increase since 1986. Central banks do not increase rates when unemployment is rising. Nor, speaking very broadly, do central banks increase rates when the government is $57 trillion in the hole.

Since Ben Bernanke is not going to defend the dollar, globalized inflation is bound to result in higher inflation rates in the USA…probably sooner, rather than later. And while it is impossible to predict the future…it is quite possible to imagine a world 10 years from now when the $320,000 Warren Buffet and Protégé spent on their T-bond will be worth less than $320,000 in today's money. It is not such a stretch to think that $1 million in 2018 will be worth less than $320,000 today.

So, here's our bet: Buffett will beat Protégé, but inflation will defeat them both. An ounce of gold is $898 today. At that price the two paid 366 ounces for their T-bond. They will have $1 million ten years from now. Our bet is that $1 million won't buy 366 ounces of gold in 2018.

*** Pity the poor people who took the bait!

The New York Times says, "Rural US Takes the Worst Hit." They refer to people who need to drive long distances to work…or shop…or go to the movies.

Here in Europe, people tend to stay close to home. Partly because it is a small place…and partly because gasoline is $9 a gallon. But in America, it is not unusual to drive 50 miles to work…or an hour to go to a restaurant.

In Europe, towns tend to be densely populated…with little suburban sprawl. But in America, houses spill out onto the Great Plains…the deserts…and the farmland - far from the city centers.

The suburban movement began in Baltimore in the 1920s. Wealthy families moved up to higher ground, to benefit from fresher air and leafier settings, and to get away from the rabble of immigrants from Italy and Eastern Europe. Later, new immigrants from the South and from Appalachia - during WWII - encouraged another big wave of suburbanization after the war. Automobiles, tramways and low fuel prices made it possible for people to live several miles from the downtown area and continue working in the city.

In fact, the whole country was shaped by low oil prices…allowing people to travel, by automobile, freely and cheaply, wherever they wanted. Gradually, in the '60s, the process of spreading out, like the bulge in American waistlines, intensified and went down the socio-economic scale. First, the wealthy moved out…then the upper middle class. But lately, the bottom of the middle class has been leading the trend. The lower middle class has been lured to buy big houses in the farthest-out suburbs. Why? Because land costs generally got cheaper as you went further and further away from the city centers. But when this trend was running hot, few people reckoned with $4 gasoline. And now, the people who live at the greatest distance from their jobs are often the people who can least afford a long commute.

But it's worse than that. The furthest-out suburbs are also those that were built most recently. So, they tended to be sold at the top of the bubble…and they are also often the biggest houses. Not only do their poor denizens have to travel long distances at high fuel prices, they often have subprime mortgages…high heating bills…and have suffered the greatest loss of equity (who wants to buy a distant house when gasoline is $4 a gallon?).

The entire housing industry is in trouble, of course. But so is the whole trend in housing that has dominated the nation for the last 90 years. Suburbanization has run its course; it has peaked out.

KB Homes has already announced that it is going to build smaller, more modest houses. "Downsizing the American Home," is the newspaper headline.

Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal tells us that LandSource has gone broke. The company owns 15,000 acres outside Los Angeles. Its largest investor is the California state pension system - Calpers - which has $970 million invested in the firm.

*** If houses planted in dirt are going down, those on wheels are going down even faster. It costs about $350 to fill up the tank of an RV, making the sector one of the worst performing areas of the stock market in the last 2 years. Coachmen, for example, was trading at $20 in 2004. Last week, the share closed at $2.81.

Bill Bonner is the President of Agora Publishing. For more on Bill Bonner, visit The Daily Reckoning.