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    6 January 2011

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    10 PREDICTIONS FOR 2011

    Submitted by Daniel Barnes on Thu, 6 Jan 2011

    Since 2007, we at Barnes Capital have been making predictions about what will happen in the New Year.

    Thinking about the future and what could happen is crucial for us in our role as a steward of peoples finances.

    History has shown the importance of a diverse portfolio, particularly in times of great change.

    Although we are not negative about the future, worst-case scenarios are something we think about.

    We positioned all of our portfolios for the continued debasement of fiat currencies (those currencies not backed

    by hard assets). We did this mainly though investing in Gold and Silver bullion and some mining stocks.

    The political headwinds of what many perceive with merit as a bankrupt economy propelled political and

    fiscal policy in 2010. We believe that the Quantitative Easing II compromise struck by Obama in late

    November, means that the dominant themes that weve believed to be most likely, including high deficits,

    government bailouts, higher commodity prices and the debasement of currencies, will continue into and

    beyond 2011.

    Economic activity is made up of government spending, corporate spending and consumer spending.

    Consumer and corporate spending have declined dramatically since 2007. Government spending is trying to

    make up for the decline with increased spending of its own. This government spending will be financed by the

    existing monetary system, which enables the debt to be issued by the Treasury department and purchased by

    the Federal Reserve. This system is strongly supported by the creditor nations of the world,

    including China, Japan, and the European Core. Ultimately, it is an inflationary path, and we are currently

    overspending governmental tax receipts by between one and two trillion dollars annually.

    The choice and path down this inflationary road was made long ago. And its not a terrible path; at its core,

    debt and currency erosion is populist in nature. In the medium- and long-term, it harms creditors and help

    debtors. That means that those most willing to spend (debtors) have greater means to do so, and those most

    able to have the purchasing power of their assets erode (creditors), pay the price for offering of excess

    their own profligate ways (and the countrys).

    2010 PREDICTIONS RECAP:

    We got a lot of things really right in our 2010 predictions.

    First, we predicted that Obamacare would become law, and that it would pale in comparison to the

    unemployment problem in 2010 and that did happen.

    Real estate did have a tough year, as we predicted, but higher long-term mortgage rates didnt materialize.

    Gold did indeed mark its 10th straight year of upswings, as we predicted, but it was less volatile than we

    expected. It did indeed close the year strong at $1421, which is close to our $1450 prediction. Municipal

    bonds performed better than we had predicted before weakening at the end of the year, and they delivered

    expected returns. Oil prices did indeed stay within our projected band of $65-$95.

    Of our more unlikely predictions, the yield curve did become extraordinarily steep, but 30-year bonds failed to

    make it back to even 5%, let alone the 6% that we predicted.

    The European sovereign debt crisis abated fears of a dollar meltdown, but nonetheless the dollar finished at a

    very low level of 79 on the U.S. $ index for the year. A culture of thrift continued to exert itself, requiring

    another $600 billion in Quantitative Easing Part 2 in November as the jobless recovery continued and

    corporate profits continued to record the highest margins ever.

    Amazon did do well, as we predicted, but Apple continued to be the beacon of fashion and success across all

    ages of consumers and we predicted that that company might have problems within a culture of thrift. That

    sure didnt happen.

    Democrats did lose the house as we anticipated, but Obama hasnt got much veneer left, let alone Teflon.

    credit

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    Finally, high uncertainty continues to reign, but risk assets, namely stocks, rallied through the last six months

    of the year to end a t their highest levels.

    The Federal Reserve continues to effectively print extra trillions of dollars each year to support the recovery.

    Stocks are more immune to this governmental Ponzi scheme of printing; consequently, they are rising.

    In many ways, 2010 was our Brian Downing year. Downing, a baseball player, was a career .275 hitter. On the

    1979 division-winning California Angels squad, Downing hit .326 and he never hit .300 again. We dont

    expect to ever top our 2010 predictions in terms of accuracy. Nonetheless, heres what we imagine for 2011:

    2011 PREDICTIONS

    1) Municipal bonds are cheap, again. We expect that theyll decline in volatility and deliver solid after-tax

    returns for investors in the 25% tax bracket and higher. We are delighted to buy California General Obligation

    bonds, which deliver 4%-7% tax-free yields on coupon-bearing and zero coupon issues. For a typical

    California investor in the 40% marginal tax rate, our 5% bonds are yielding an equity-like 8.33% return on an

    after tax basis.

    2) Gold. Gold is real money. Thats not really anything new; were in the late innings of the ballgame on this

    one. But the biggest money in any bull market is made in the final, speculative 3rdpart of the cycle. We may

    be approaching that third and final phase, which we imagine will last for 3-plus years. Gold will climb again in

    2011 and finish above $1600/oz.

    The following is a list of the spot price of Gold on the last day of the year for 12 years.

    1999 $288

    2000 $271 -6%

    2001 $278 2%

    2002 $348 25%

    2003 $415 20%

    2004 $437 5%

    2005 $516 18%

    2006 $634 23%

    2007 $833 31%

    2008 $881 6%

    2009 $1096 24%

    2010 $1421 30%

    3) Oil will break out to more than $100 a barrel, and this will reduce global growth as it did in 2008, stalling

    the economic recovery, again.

    4) Real estate will continue to bottom. Corporate real estate will fall between 5 to 10 percent and residential

    prices are likely to remain flat or go down as well, as low mortgage rates and higher dividend and capital gains

    rates support many current market prices in real estate.

    5) Stocks will actually perform decently and with less volatility than the last several years. The current

    policies of Federal Reserve, however, are leading to trouble. It wont happen this year, however. That

    Armageddon is destined for a Judgment Day in 2012 or perhaps during the ironic 2013 centennial of Ponzi

    banking system of the Federal Reserve.

    Unlikely to Happen: but it wouldnt surprise us if . . .

    6) Equities become the rage du jour, and stocks start to party like its 1999. Why? Because perceived safe

    bonds pay paltry interest rates (10-year taxable treasury is 3.4%), whereas many blue-chips stocks are paying

    3-4%, and stocks offer inflation protection, which bonds do not. The Dow Jones delivers an 18% return to

    finish within shouting distance of 2007 levels.

    7) Some states seek the political cover of economic receivership due to budgetary impasse. Without this

    cover, existing contracts cannot be renegotiated. This roils the markets for a number of weeks, but like the

    European sovereign debt problem, it doesnt de-rail the strong year for equities.

    8) The foreclosure problem hasnt been solved. Many homeowners continue to be unable to afford their

    homes. Meanwhile, four out of five economics professors predict that Orange Countyhousing prices will rise 2-

    7% in 2011. The fifth says its falling 9%. Since housing declines tend to last a decade, and this one started in

    2006, our money is with the minority forecaster. A number of different issues could bring another 10% decline

    real estate in 2011.

    money

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    9) The Simpson Bowles plan manages to stay on life support throughout 2011. This was the ambitious plan

    to reduce the national debt with real cuts in Medicare, Social Security, and other large entitlement programs.

    This plan is currently DOA following the QE2 issuance and other Obama compromises, which affectively drove

    a stake through the heart of the Simpson Bowles austerity proposal. America has no appetite for austerity.

    Thrift perhaps, austerity Nein! Danke

    10) Gold fever turns speculative. Gold flirts with $2000/oz prices and gold stocks double with the Joe Public

    finally buying his pieces of gold. Like any bull market, the most money is always made (and lost) during the

    speculative phase. When the speculative phase in precious metals arrives, we expect it to last for multipleyears, and as with the Internet, the dot-coms, and real estate, it will go on for far longer, higher and further than

    anybody believes possible. QE 3 next autumn might kick off golds speculative phase.

    IN CONCLUSION

    The year 2011 shows signs of a cyclical rebound driven by government spending, government-subsidized low

    interest rates, large corporate balance sheets and an increase in risk appetites. Theres a chance that the

    balanced money manager (me) could be underinvested in risky assets this year. After strong performances in

    2009 and 2010, we enter 2010 underweighted in risk assets and we will not be surprised if we underperform

    market returns in 2011.

    Todays values in stocks and bonds are not overly compelling. We see modest returns over the next five years

    in the mid-single digits. Therefore, we will not increase our risk exposure substantially this year, in order to

    achieve a pyrrhic one-year victory. Our clients primary needs are wealth preservation. We believe that real

    wealth preservation in inflation-adjusted terms is going to be difficult to achieve this decade and our investment

    strategy is focused on safe returns, not optimal returns. We remain believers in the solid returns of strong

    dividend-paying stocks, covered call writing, and municipal bonds, including California General Obligation

    bonds and Gold and Silver allocations.

    A cataclysmic meltdown seem unlikely this year, there is simply too much money being printed by the policies

    of Ben Bernanke with the Federal Reserve for things to fall apart. Austerity, it isnt. But, to employ an

    overused clich, were just kicking the can down the road. Let the next president preside over structural

    change; this ones just muddling through as best he can.

    Wishing you a happy and prosperous 2011.

    Original source: Barnes Capital

    Daniel Barnes

    Barnes CapitalPrimary Tel 925-284-3503985 Moraga Road Suite 205 Lafayette CA 94549getstarted @ barnescapital.com http://www.barnescapital.com/

    Other Articles by Daniel Barnes

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    The Business of Wall Street

    Question: Whats a Trillion Dollars Do?

    Faith and Reason

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