Investment Strategies
Keep It Real: Seeking Safety, Returns Amid Currency Debasement, State Interference – Pictet

The Swiss wealth management firm examines the broad approaches investors should take at a time of an eroding dollar, a more activist and unpredictable set of government policies.
Investors and their advisors must confront a time of rising
fiscal policy dominance – aka, bigger government – and debasement
of money, which often translates into inflation. This means “real
assets” – equities, property, gold and land – become more
attractive. Witness the rising price of gold. The yellow metal
has surged by 47 per cent over the last 12 months to more than
$4,000 per ounce. Gold is a classic safe-haven asset and that
suggests safety is top of mind for many people.
In the following article, Géraldine Sundstrom (main picture), who
is head of investment offering at Pictet Wealth Management, part
of Geneva-headquartered Pictet, considers a number of
topics: monetary debasement; sustainability of public finances;
government meddling in private sector business and interference
with certain institutions – raising worries about whether people
can rely on public data, with certain assets
being at a premium.
As always, while the editors are pleased to share such
commentary, we don’t necessarily endorse all views and invite
readers to reply and suggest ideas. To do so, email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
a and amanda.cheesley@clearviewpublishing.com
Financial markets’ growing concerns about debt sustainability,
mainly but not solely in the US, are taking us into an era of
fiscal dominance. This is essentially political pressure to keep
interest rates down as a wayof coping with ballooning
government borrowing. As recently as 2014, central bankers were
dubbed “Alchemists” (1) and hailed as the most powerful
people on the planet, whose monetary remedies brought the world
back from the brink during the Great Financial Crisis (GFC). Now,
they are bullied and fighting to control their own policies. They
are at the sharp end of fiscal dominance.
Since the GFC, the US has departed from its traditional pattern
of expanding deficits at times of war, and reducing them during
times of peace. The current US administration is accelerating
this trend, and pushing the reliance on debt towards a tipping
point. This is shown by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA),
which extends expiring tax cuts and creates new ones, and which
the Congressional Budget Office estimates will add over $3
trillion to the national debt by 2034.
The US administration is also intervening with institutions such
as the US Federal Reserve. The administration is not only
leaning on Fed policymakers to cut interest rates, it is pressing
for some of them to quit. This is with a view to appointing its
favoured picks and effectively controlling the Fed.
Undermining the institutional status quo extends to other US
public institutions, as shown by firing the chief of
the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Staff cuts at the BLS have
reduced its capacity to collect actual price data – developments
that are calling into question the credibility of US data. Such a
fraying of confidence in these leading US institutions is
problematic for a fiat currency – one that derives value from
faith in its issuer, rather than being pegged to the price of a
commodity such as gold.
The upshot of the new US policy agenda is an erosion of the value
of money, and the depreciation of the dollar. Dollar debasement
is negative for holders of US cash and fixed income assets – as
the market has little control over the policies that underpin, or
undermine, trust in the dollar.
Investors are piling into equities and other “real assets” – such
as gold, private assets, real estate and bitcoin – as the
debasement of money pushes them away from cash and government
bonds. As a result, equities have just enjoyed their best
five-year period of outperformance versus bonds in over 40 years
despite all the uncertainty and political moves that would have
rocked markets in the past. Gold hitting record highs is acting
as a warning sign about the future of the fiat monetary
system.
Furthermore, in the corporate world, an uptrend in profit margins
is being driven by a sustained shift towards knowledge-based
industries, reduced corporate taxes, efficiency gains, and
improving productivity. This may help explain why markets seem to
be so resilient to the increasingly unorthodox policies being
pursued by the US administration, such as ramping up trade
tariffs and politicising public institutions. Moreover, the OBBBA
can be expected to stimulate the US economy and support growth
from next year.
For investors, the key here is to be nimble. The equity bull run
could continue, or it could break. In this context, it is
essential to keep an open mind while maintaining sensible
risk-reward parameters. In these abnormal times, markets may
exhibit strange behaviour and equity valuations may diverge from
fundamentals.
However, the rise of fiscal dominance and the associated
debasement of money serve to highlight the case for real assets.
For some investors that means gold, for others equities, and for
some cryptocurrencies as an alternative store of value. In other
words, keep it real.
Footnote
1, Neil Irwin, The Alchemists: Three Central Bankers and a World on Fire, Penguin, 2014