Warren Buffett advises in today’s New York Times that the Great Stimulus must one day be clipped as the Great Recession fades. As the Oracle of Omaha explains, the “enormous dosages of monetary medicine continue to be administered and, before long, we will need to deal with their side effects.”
We’ve been making a similar argument for some time, although the cause seemed lost when we advised in May that the crowd should recognize that the Federal Reserve must begin raising interest rates at some point. That future has been easily ignored, and perhaps for obvious reasons, given the economic events of the past year or so. But the arrival of Buffett’s warning suggests that sentiment may be set to turn by focusing the crowd’s gaze on the inevitable. If so, that’s healthy, if only because recognizing the risks that loom, as opposed to the ones that just passed, is always a productive exercise in managing money and otherwise boosting one’s odds of survival.
As we wrote in May, “At some point, the economic trends will shift and waiting too long to raise interest rates will be the primary hazard. We don’t know if the turning point will come in a few months or a few years, but we shouldn’t delude ourselves that it’s never coming.”