Market is unprepared for the inflation fallout Whartons Jeremy Siegel warns
Wall Street may be on the verge of an uncharacteristically painful quarter.
Wharton finance professor Jeremy Siegel, whoâs known for his positive market forecasts, is sounding the alarm on the marketâs ability to cope with inflation.
âWeâre headed for some trouble ahead,â he told CNBCâs âTrading Nationâ on Friday. âInflation, in general, is going to be a much bigger problem than the Fed believes.â
Siegel warns there are serious risks tied to rising prices.
âThereâs going to be pressure on the Fed to accelerate its taper process,'â he said. âI do not believe that the market is prepared for an accelerated taper.â
His cautious shift is a clear departure from his bullishness in early January. On Jan. 4 on âTrading Nation,â he correctly predicted the Dow would hit 35,000 in 2021, a 14% jump from the yearâs first market open. The index hit an all-time high of 35,631.19 on August 16. On Friday, it closed at 34,326.46.
According to Siegel, the biggest threat facing Wall Street is Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell stepping away from easy money policies much sooner than expected due to surging inflation.
âWe all know that a lot of the levity of the equity market is related to the liquidity that the Fed has provided. If thatâs going to be taken away faster, that also means that interest rate hikes are going to occur sooner,â he noted. âBoth those things are not positives for the equity market.â
Siegel is particularly concerned about the impact on growth stocks, particularly technology. He suggests the tech-heavy Nasdaq, which is 5% away from its record high, is set up for sharp losses.
âThere will be a challenge for the long duration stocks,â said Siegel. âThe tilt will be towards the value stocks.â
He sees the backdrop boding well for companies benefitting from rising rates, have pricing power and deliver dividends.
âYield is scarce and you donât want to lock yourself into to long-term government bonds which I think are going to suffer quite a dramatically over the next six months,â he said.
The inflationary backdrop, according to Siegel, may set-up underperformers utilities and consumer staples, known for their dividends, for a strong run.
âThey may have their day in the sun finally,â said Siegel. âIf you have a dividend, firms can raise their prices and historically dividends are inflation-protected. Theyâre not as stable, of course, as a government bond. But they have that inflation protection and a positive yield.â
Siegel is bullish on gold, too. He believes it has become relatively cheap as an inflation hedge and cites bitcoinâs popularity as a reason.
âI remember inflation in the 70s. Everyone turned to gold. They turned to collectables. They turned to precious metals,â he said. âToday in our digital world, theyâre turning to bitcoin, and I think ignoring gold.â
Heâs also not put off by the jump in real estate prices.
âI donât think itâs a bubble,â Siegel said. âInvestors have foreseen some of this inflationâ¦. Mortgage rates are going to have to rise an awful lot more to really, I think, dent real estate. So, I think real estate [and] REITs still are good assets to own.â
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