Marc
Faber: Prepare for a Massive Market Meltdown
The
markets are going to go into meltdown soon, so expect stocks to lose
20 percent of their value, Marc Faber, author of the Gloom, Boom and
Doom report told CNBC on Tuesday.
CNBC,
13
November, 2012
“I
don’t think markets are going down because of Greece, I don’t
think markets are going down because of the ‘fiscal cliff’ —
because there won’t be a ‘fiscal cliff,’ ” Faber told CNBC’s
“Squawk Box.” “The market is going down because corporate
profits will begin to disappoint, the global economy will hardly grow
next year or even contract, and that is the reason why stocks, from
the highs of September of 1,470 on the S&P, will drop at least 20
percent, in my view.”
Faber,
who is known for his bearish views, cited tech giant Apple [AAPL
542.898 0.068 (+0.01%) ], a company whose disappointing
earnings have caused its stock to fall 20 percent from its September
highs and 14 percent in the past month.
A
series of poor quarterly earnings from corporate giants such as
Amazon.com [AMZN 226.60 0.13 (+0.06%) ], McDonald's [MCD
84.64 -0.24 (-0.28%) ] and Google [GOOG 659.0532 -6.8468
(-1.03%) ] have hurt investor sentiment in recent weeks.
Faber
argued that the “fiscal cliff,” a rise in taxes and automatic
spending cuts, would actually involve some minor tax increases in
“five years’ time” and some spending cuts “in 100 years.”
What
the U.S. needed was some pain, he said, aptly demonstrated by the
euro zone’s austerity measures that are attempting, with a mixed
measure of success, to curb gaping budget deficits.
“There
will be pain and there will be very substantial pain. The question is
do we take less pain now through austerity or risk a complete
collapse of society in five to 10 years’ time?” he said, adding
that there was a lack of political will to tackle the U.S. budget.
Faber
added: “In a democracy, they’re not going to take the pain,
they’re going to kick down the problems and they’re going to get
bigger and bigger.”
Payback
Time
Faber
identified several issues curbing an economic recovery, such as the
real estate market, which he said had never been so “overbuilt.”
He also said there was lots more deleveraging ahead.
“In
the Western world, including Japan, the problem we have is one of too
much debt and that debt now will have to be somewhere, somehow repaid
or it will slow down economic growth,” Faber said. “I think we
lived beyond our means from 1980 to 2007, and now it’s payback
period.”
Faber
told CNBC that central bank stimulus was useless and the implosion of
markets was the only way to restructure the financial system.
“I
think the whole global financial system will have to be reset and it
won’t be reset by central bankers but by imploding markets —
either the currency [markets, debt market or stock markets,” he
said. “It will happen — it will happen one day and then we’ll
be lucky if we still have 50 percent of the asset values that we have
today.”
To
see video GO
HERE
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