Monday, 6 February 2012

Knowing and Setting the Upper Limits of Share Price

The P/E also can be used to establish a cap on intrinsic value.

While asset values set the lowest level for estimating intrinsic value, the P/E can serve as an upper limit.

The P/E ratio establishes the maximum amount an investor should pay for earnings.

  • If the investor decides that the appropriate P/E ratio for a stock is 10, the share price paid should be no more than 10 times most recent yearly earnings.


It is not wrong to pay more, Graham and Dodd noted; it is that doing so enters the realm of speculation.  
  • Since young, rapidly expanding companies generally trade at a P/E ratio of 20 to 25 or above, Graham usually avoided them, which was one reason he never invested in some new start up stocks, though he used and was impressed by their products early in his career.

A Subnormal P/E

When a stock is selling at a P/E significantly lower than that of its competitors, an investor will want to know why?

A low P/E does not necessarily mean higher risk, though the company should be studied with that possibility in mind.

  • The low P/E stock may be selected anyway if, for example, it is a cyclical stock at a low in its cycle.   Cyclical stocks - automobile manufacturers are the most notorious among them - periodically develop fire-sale P/E ratios.  
  • Other out-of-favour stocks also can drop to surprisingly low P/Es.

On the other hand, if a stock is cheap in terms of its multiple for a troubling reason (or permanent deterioration of  business  fundamentals), such as pending depletion of oil or mineral reserves or a patent expiration, the value investor may want to shop elsewhere.




Comment:
Often the low P/E is appropriate for the stock as it is perceived to have poor potential for growth or its earnings are poor, volatile and less stable.

A Pricey P/E

High Pricey P/E

A company may be selling at an exceptionally high P/E because it is considered to have remarkably good prospects for growth.

No matter how high the quality of the car you are looking at, there is a price at which it is no longer worth buying.  No matter how junky a car is, there is a price at which it is a bargain.  Stocks are no different.

Some stocks with high multiples work out, but investors who consistently buy high multiple stocks are likely to lose money in the long run.

Often the highest multiples are present in a bull market which increases the risk.  

Graham and Dodd observed, " It is a truism to say that the more impressive the record and the more promising the prospects of stability and growth, the more liberally the per-share earnings should be valued, subject always to our principle that a multiplier higher than 20 (i.e., 'earning basis' of less than 5%) will carry the issue out of the investment range."

It is not wrong to pay more, Graham and Dodd noted; it is simply that doing so enters the realm of speculation.

Super High-Growth Portfolio - Pushing the Limit to achieve Maximum Portfolio Growth

There are investors who can and should invest the time and effort to create a supper high-growth portfolio.

Although it will require greater effort in selection and maintenance, a high-performance portfolio can be achieved while abiding by the commandments of value.

Any appearance of higher risk must be well understood and accounted for in the share price.

Pushing the limit, say Graham and Dodd, is a game for the strong-minded and daring individual.


According to Graham, a growth stock should double its per share earnings in 10 years - that is, increase earnings at a compound annual rate of over 7.1%.  To do so, a growth stock's sales should be continually higher than sales in the early years.

The investor who can successfully identify such "growth companies" when their shares are available at reasonable prices is certain to do superlatively well with his capital.

Have an opinion on future growth - How can the company increase its earnings?

It is only rational to have an opinion on future growth.  Otherwise, how could you ever choose a stock?

When forming that opinion, back up quantitative information with qualitative factors.

For example, ask what management is doing to make a positive impact on earnings.

According to Peter Lynch, there are 5 basic ways a company can increase earnings:


  • reduce costs; 
  • raise prices; 
  • expand into new markets;
  • sell more of its products to the old markets; or
  • revitalize, close or otherwise dispose of a losing operation.


When management is enacting growth-promoting activities, earnings may be temporarily flat.  They often soon take a giant step up.

Benjamin Graham saw a vulnerability in a high growth rate and in high returns on capital - the two normally go together.

So what's there to worry about in good earnings?  Exceptionally high earnings often attract rough competitors.  

The good part is that high earnings lure enthusiastic new investors, who often bid the share into the stratosphere.


Comment:
Buy good quality growth companies.
Assess the quality of the business and the management.
Then do the valuation.
These are the basics of the QVM or QMV approach to investing.

Sunday, 5 February 2012

Charlie Munger - Projections do more harm than good

Reading Tea Leaves

" I have no use whatsoever for projections or forecasts.  They create an illusion of apparent precision. The more meticulous they are, the more concerned you should be.  We never look at projections but we care very much about, and look very deeply, at track records.  If a company has a lousy track record but a very bright future, we will miss the opportunity,"  explained Warren Buffett.

Charlie Munger, added that in his opinion projections do more harm than good.  "They are put together by people who have an interest in a particular outcome, have a subconscious bias, and its apparent precision makes it fallacious.  They remind me of Mark Twain's saying, 'A mine is a hole in the ground owned by a liar.'  Projections in America are often a lie, although not an intentional one, but the worst kind because the forecaster often believes them himself."

Here is how Graham and Dodd looked at projections.  "While a trend shown in the past is a fact, a 'future trend' is only an assumption.  The past, or even careful projections, can be seen as only a 'rough index' to the future."

More than five decades have passed since those words were said, and Buffett still agrees.

How Value Investor identifies Earnings, Sales and Future Growth

The real goal of the value investor is to identify companies with solid financial base that are growing at a faster rate (in terms of sales and earnings) than both their competitors and the economy in general.

All things being equal, share price is likely to increase in value at about the same rate that sales grow.

For dominant companies in major industries, an investor will want a sales growth rate of 5 to 7 percent.  

Within a portfolio, look for an overall sales growth rate of at least 10% annually.

Earnings need not rise every year. Almost all industries operate in cycles, and any company can suffer a temporary setback.

But investors should be wary

  • when a company's earnings and sales are erratic without explanation or 
  • when sales and earnings are slowly sinking and the company is not taking corrective action.

Dilution of Earnings

When considering a company's earnings per share history, make certain the numbers are adjusted for changes in capitalization; that is, work from fully diluted numbers. 

Be sure that all shares that have been authorized for issuance by the board of directors are added into the number of shares outstanding.    Newly issued shares, split shares, and shelf registration (shares sitting in the company's vault but not yet issued) must be put in the pot.

This admonition applies not only to the most current earnings but to any earnings from the past that are used for comparison.  The easiest way to make the adjustment when new shares are authorized is to work backward.  Compute earlier earnings as if the new shares, rights, warrants, privileges, options, and so on already have been exercised.  Corresponding changes should be made to book value and current asset value per share.

Fortunately, most companies include adjustments for shareholders in their financial statements, reporting figures on a fully diluted basis.  But sometimes not.  This is why shareholders must be wide awake when comparing earnings from one year to another, always work from fully diluted earnings.

Retained Earnings are central to the process of investment growth

A company adds up its income, subtracts its expenses, and pays any dividends due; what is left becomes retained earnings.  These are undistributed profits.

Undistributed profits or retained earnings are central to the process of investment growth.

The net worth of the company builds up through the reinvestment of undistributed earnings.

Corporate raiders in particular love to find a company with a lot of cash reserves accumulated from retained earnings.

There is a legitimate dispute over how much retained earnings are adequate, and at what level a company should let loose of some cash and distribute it to shareholders.

Overall, retained earnings like the payment of dividends, deliver a powerful message:  the company generates more cash than it needs for the operation of the business.

That's exactly what a good investment should do.  

These earnings, over and above total expenses and taxes, drive the share price higher.

Common stocks have one important investment characteristic and one important speculative characteristic.  
  • Their investment value and average market price tend to increase irregularly but persistently over the decades, as their net worth builds up through the reinvestment of undistributed earnings.
  • The speculative feature is no mystery.  It is the tendency toward excessive and irrational price fluctuations as investors (in Graham's words) "give way to hope, fear, and greed."

Inherent Permanence of Earning Power - The Income that Keeps Coming In

If past earnings are to have any meaning to investors, there must be an inherent permanence to the earning power.  

Earnings may be cyclical, or even inconsistent, and still have some permanence.

  • Many automobile companies have notoriously cyclical results; yet they have managed to keep up an ongoing business over many years.

Benjamin Graham considered a company to have stable earnings when:
  1. earnings doubled in the most recent 10 years, and,
  2. earnings declined by no more than 5% no more than twice in the past 10 years.
Another approach to measuring stability is to compare one period of earnings with an earlier period.  
  • Stability is assessed by the trend of per-share earnings over a ten-year period, compared to the average of the most recent three years.  
  • No decline represents 100% stability.
For example:  Company A earnings per share nearly doubled in the 10-year period 1984 -1994:
  • 5.22  (1984); 6.25; 6.31;.5.90; 5.08; 1.36; 0.30; -2.7, 1.38, 6.77; and 10.1 (1994)
  • 10-year average = $4.95
  • 3-year average = $6.08
  • 1994 book value = $46.65 per share
  • 1995 trading range = $38.25 to $58.13 per share

Income Statement in Perspective

When problems exist in an income statement, they tend to distort earnings only in a single year, or over a short period of time.

To even out these short-term distortions, use average share price, annual earnings, and other numbers over a span of 7 to 10 years.

"Averaging" establishes typical numbers for the company.  The longer the time included in the average, the better.

Flash Profits: One-time event that impacts earnings

Any one-time event that impacts earnings, such as a gain from the sale of an asset or a one-time loss resulting from a catastrophic event or the write-off of a potential debt, should be lifted out of the earnings figures and set to one side.

These occurrences should be recognized for what they are and judged accordingly.  They are in no way indicative of the outlook for future earnings.

A one-time sale of assets tends to make overall corporate profits look better in the year it occurs.  Yet the sale decreases the total assets of the company.  There is no real gain.

In an established, well-managed company, daily operations finance themselves with cyclical shortfalls covered by short-term borrowing, so never should a one-time gain be used to cover ordinary expenses.  

There is no real gain from the one-time sale of assets unless the money is used for one of the following:

  • Restore the asset base
  • Reduce debt
  • Contribute substantially to future earnings.

Taking a Hit - Accounting Write Off or Write Down

Corporate accountants write off or write down items under several sets of circumstances.

  • They may write a debt off the books that they are convinced will never be collected.
  • They may mark down the value of an asset that is no longer worth what it once was.

Excessive write-offs in one year can, in some circumstances, lead to greater than normal profits in the next.  It is an old management trick to take all write-offs or write-down during a period when earnings aren't looking so good anyway.  

  • The company decides to load all the bad news into one accounting period rather than several fairly bad ones, but the contrast between the bad quarter or year and the subsequent good one appears dramatic.
  • This jump in earnings thrills the investing public (the company did lousy last year, but look how it's come around!)  But again, the better earnings may turn out to be a  brief aberration.  The following year the company's earnings fall back into the old ways.

Yet done frankly and for the right reasons, write-downs may lead to real and long-lasting improvement in earnings.  

  • They make a difference when the company is saying:  "This was a problem; we've faced up to it.  The adjustment will allow the income statement to accurately reflect the condition of our company in the years ahead."

For alert investors, losses or gains that result from a single episode can be a boon.

  • If other investors overreact to the news in either a positive or negative way, it may create a chance to buy or sell at an advantageous price.

Divine Dividends

Dividends represent nothing more than the investor's share of earnings that will be received immediately (rather than through reinvestment and future growth of the stock).

Dividends are one of the quickest and healthiest ways that earnings can make their way into shareholders' pockets.

Graham argued that intelligent investors would rather have dividends in their pockets (even if investors use them to buy more of the same stock) than risk waiting for possible future growth.  Furthermore, he insisted, it is management's responsibility to pay dividends.

For long-term investors who follow a "buy and hold" strategy, dividends are the only way to collect on investment gains.

In addition to representing money in the bank, dividends are, to many investors, a reliable indicator of future growth.  

Values are determined roughly by earnings available for dividends.  This relation among earnings, dividends and values survives.

A long history of dividend payments and regular dividend increases also indicates a substantial company with limited risk.  

Additionally, a rise in the dividend is tangible confirmation of the confidence of management in good times ahead.  A cut in the dividend is a red flag indicating trouble on the track.

Not all corporate income need be paid in dividends.  Depending on the industry and how much capital is required to keep the business growing, the appropriate payout may be as much as 80% or as little as 50% of net earnings.  

When studying the dividend payout of a company, calculate both average earnings and average dividends over a 10-year period.  From those two averages you can determine the average payout.  

Earnings fluctuate, but dividends tend to remain stable or,  in the best companies, to rise gradually.


One way of determining if a stock is overvalued or undervalued is to compare its dividend yield with that of similar companies.
  • Safety, growth, and other factors being equal, the stock with the highest dividend and the lowest share price is the best bargain.
  • As a further check of value, investors should compare the stock's dividend yield with that of the whole stock market dividend yield.


    Rationale for Withholding Dividends

    If a company isn't paying dividends it should, like Berkshire Hathaway, be doing something profitable with its earnings.  

    It is acceptable to withhold dividends for the following reasons:
    • To strengthen the company's working capital
    • To increase productive capacity
    • To reduce debt.
    Graham contended that when corporate management is stingy with dividends or withholds them altogether, it is sometimes for self-serving reasons.  It is easier to keep the cash on hand to bail management out of bad times or bad decisions.  Sometimes the dividend policy is simply a reflection of the tax status of management and large investors - they don't want the addition to their current taxable income.  Consequently, other investors get no income.




    Dividends in Jeopardy

    Dividends may be put in jeopardy in two ways:
    • When a company's earnings per share is less than its dividend per share
    • When debt is excessive.
    A company's average earnings (over several years) should be sufficient to cover its average dividend.  Though earnings per share can fall below dividend per share from time to time with reserves making up the difference, the condition can persist for only so long.  

    A company with substantial earnings rarely becomes insolvent because of bank loans.  But when a company is under pressure, lenders may require a suspension of dividends as a form of financial discipline.

    Companies amassing huge cash reserves should use these intelligently

    Companies with large cash reserves can use these for the direct benefit of their shareholders by giving dividends or can deploy these to grow their businesses in the future.

    Benjamin Graham was critical of amassing huge cash reserves within a business unless the company had a genuine future use for the funds.  

    A certain calculable amount of reserves are necessary to:

    • finance growth, 
    • guard against bad luck or down cycles, 
    • cover the settlement of a lawsuit, or 
    • eventually replace some important asset. 
    Graham argued, there is a limit to that need.  

    The purpose of business is to earn profits for its owners.  Owners are entitled to access to profits.  

    If earnings are retained, Graham persisted in his argument, they had better be used intelligently.

    Graham contended that when corporate management is stingy with dividends or withholds them altogether, it is sometimes for self-serving reasons.  It is easier to keep the cash on hand to bail management out of bad times or bad decisions.  Sometimes the dividend policy is simply a reflection of the tax status of management and large investors - they don't want the addition to their current taxable income.  Consequently, other investors get no income.

    Probably the greatest retainer of earnings of all time is Berkshire Hathaway, which keeps and reinvests all its earnings.  Berkshire's 23% return on shareholder equity is almost double that of American industry, and Buffett says he will continue to hoard earnings so as long as a dollar of retained earnings translates to no less than a dollar of increased shareholder value.  In his case, investors are inclined to let him have his way.


    Comment:
    It is not uncommon to encounter a company with huge cash reserves in their businesses earning only  fixed deposit interest rates for many years.  Shareholders should play their active role as business owners through raising the relevant questions to the management in the annual general meeting, to use these cash reserves intelligently.

    In recent years, strong cash reserves have provoked takeover bids from corporate raiders.  Are they liberators of cash for shareholders or are they destroyers of business, interested only in their own personal enrichment?  These raiders often planned to use cash reserves to help finance their purchase, a tactic that often sucks the strength from a company.  The management may defend the cash reserve was needed for various reasons, for example, the company needed the cash to cover the next down cycle of the manufacturing business.  Corporate raiders love to find and are attracted to a company with huge cash reserves.

    Market Timing - If you absolutely must play the horses

    Though Benjamin Graham in no way recommend trying it, he did say that there is a way to combine market timing and value investing principles.

    However, Graham noted, the method makes heavy demands on human fortitude, and it can keep an investor out of long stretches of a booming market*.  It sounds simple.  Yet for those who realize how difficult it is to follow, this strategy can diminish the risk of trading on market movements.

    Here is the way it works:

    1.  Select a diversified list of common stocks (for example, buying undervalued stocks).
    2.  Determine a normal value for each stock (choose the PE ratio that seems appropriate).
    3.  Buy the stocks when shares can be bought at a substantial discount - say, two-thirds of what the investor has established as normal value.  As an alternative to buying at one target price, the investor can start buying as the stock declines, beginning at 80 percent of normal value.
    4.  *Sell the stocks when the price has risen substantially above normal value - say 20 percent to 50 percent higher.

    The investor thus would buy in a market decline and sell in a rising market.


    Comment:
    *When you buy wonderful companies at fair prices, you often do not need to sell.  You may consider selling some or all when the stock prices are obviously very overvalued.  In these situations, the upside gains are limited and the downside losses are high.  These will impair the total returns of your portfolio.  However, even in such overvalued situations, you should only consider selling when the prices have risen very substantially above their normal values, for example, >> 50% over their normal values.  Also, remember to reinvest the money back into other wonderful companies at fair prices that offer a higher reward/risk ratio and that promise returns commensurate with your investment objective.

    Buying Time

    When the market hits its low, true value investors feel that harvest time has arrived.

    "The most beneficial time to be a value investor is when the market is falling," says institutional manager Seth Klarman.  There are plenty of companies ripe for the picking.

    In the summer of 1973, when the stock market had plunged 20 percent in value in less than 2 months, Warren Buffett told a friend, "You know, some days I get up and I want to tap dance."

    Unfortunately, this is the time when investors are feeling most beat up by the markets.  Fear and negative thinking prevail, and anyone who has faced down a bear knows how paralyzing fear can be.  This, at the depths of a bear market, is the time to buy as many stocks as are affordable.

    Value bargains aren't found in strong market.  A good rule is to examine stock markets that have reacted adversely for a year or so.

    Undervalued stocks quite often lie dormant for months - many months - on end.  The only way to anticipate and catch the surge is to identify the undervalued situation, then take a position, and wait.

    Benjamin Graham: "Buying a neglected and therefore undervalued issue for profit generally proves a protracted and patience-trying experience."

    Signs at the Bottom

    The bottom - or near enough the bottom - of a market cycle theoretically should be easier to call than the top or near top.

    The evidence is found in the corporate balance sheets, income statements, P/E ratios, dividend yields, and other quantitative measures.  It is likewise reflected in low ratios for the market as a whole.  The quantitative factors speak for themselves.

    The dividend yield on the Dow Jones Industrial Average, for example, usually cycles between a high yield of 6 percent at the market's bottom and a low yield of 3 percent at the top.   The Dow's average dividend yield sometimes stretches beyond these boundaries, but historically this is a trustworthy parameter of undervalue and overvalue.

    Patience - a fundamental investment discipline to have a lot of.

    There is only one strategy that works for value investors when the market is high - PATIENCE.

    The investor can do one of two things, both of which requires steady nerves:
    1.  Sell all stocks in a portfolio, take profits, and wait for the market to decline.

    • At that time, many good values will present themselves.
    • This may sound easy, but it pains many investors to sell a stock when its price is still rising.

    2.  Stick with those stocks in the portfolio that have long-term potential.

    • Sell only those that are clearly overvalued, and once more wait for the market to decline.
    • At this time, value stocks may be appreciating at slow pace compared with the frisky growth stocks, but not always.


    But come the correction, be it sudden or slow, the well-chosen value stocks have a better chance of holding their price.

    As for the hot stocks, when they take a hard hit the investor is cornered.  If the stock is sold, the loss becomes permanent.  The lost money cannot grow.  If the investor hangs on to the deflated stock, the long trail back to the original purchase price will deeply erode the overall returns.


    Comments:


    When you buy wonderful companies at fair or bargain prices, you can often hold these forever.  The earnings power of these companies ensure that your returns will be positive over the long term.  You often do not need to sell, even if these companies are slightly overvalued as their intrinsic values in the future will probably be higher than the present prices.  When the share prices of these wonderful companies go down in tandem with the market corrections or bear markets, you often have the chance to buy more at lower prices.  The only action you should avoid is to buy these wonderful companies when they are trading at obviously overvalued high prices.  A wonderful company can be a bad investment when you buy it at a high price.


    Saturday, 4 February 2012

    Will the great interest rate gamble pay off?

    Will the great interest rate gamble pay off?
    By flooding the system with 'free’ money, the central banks could be storing up trouble.

    Since arriving at the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi has engineered a sort of Club Med putsch, sidelining the German hawks and embarking on monetary activism - Will the great interest rate gamble pay off?
    Since arriving at the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi has engineered a sort of Club Med putsch, sidelining the German hawks and embarking on monetary activism Photo: REUTERS
    Bravo, Mario Draghi, the European Central Bank’s new president. Everyone assumed that this mild-mannered Italian would be so determined to prove himself to his Bundesbank masters that he’d be even more German than the Germans in pursuit of the principles of sound money. The profligate Italian of caricature would become the hair-shirted German, lashed to the mast of the Bundesbank’s anti-inflationary tradition.
    In practice, he’s proved anything but. Since arriving at the ECB, Draghi’s engineered a sort of Club Med putsch, sidelining the German hawks and embarking on the kind of unconventional monetary activism that for several years now has been the hallmark of the US Federal Reserve and Bank of England. He’s been bold, and he’s been decisive.
    And it appears to have worked. In promising unlimited funding to Europe’s stricken banks, he’s very likely saved the Continent from the Lehman’s moment for which it was undoubtedly heading. Both Spain and Italy have also found it easier to fund themselves in financial markets, and spreads have narrowed. Banks have been encouraged to borrow cheaply from the ECB to buy higher-yielding government bonds – the “Sarkozy carry trade” – which in turn has allowed countries to finance themselves less expensively.
    By the time this month’s auction is over, the ECB will have doled out nearly one and a half trillion euros of “free” money to help keep the banking system alive, with much more to come over the months ahead.
    Nobody is under any illusions. These actions have not succeeded in vanquishing the crisis. Underlying structural issues remain unresolved, and it is most unlikely that the starvation diet to which much of the eurozone periphery has been condemned will result in robust recovery. But Mr Draghi has at least prevented the patient from dying on the slab. Two cheers for that.
    Even so, you have to wonder where all this “financial repression” – the artificial depression of interest rates – is going to lead. Since the crisis began, the world’s major central banks have engaged in a degree of intervention in financial markets quite without precedent in the modern age, if ever. In seeking salvation from the banking maelstrom, interest rates have been cut close to zero, and long-term bond yields suppressed to historic lows.
    In Britain, the Bank of England has already bought up more than a third of the conventional gilts market, or rather more than a quarter of the entire national debt. Since quantitative easing began, the Bank has hoovered up gilts to the value of more than a half of those issued by the Debt Management Office, greatly easing its task in financing the deficit.
    Nor is this the limit of the UK’s financial repression. Banks have been required by regulators greatly to increase their liquidity buffers, creating another big source of demand for UK gilts. It’s the same in the US and Europe.
    These sovereign debt holdings have created new threats. Given the inflated size of the buffers, it would require only a quite small rise in interest rates – one or two percentage points – to create additional solvency problems for the banks, as we saw with the Franco-Belgian bank Dexia, which had to seek a bail-out after its eurozone sovereign debt turned toxic. Yet it is the rapid expansion of central bank balance sheets which is beginning to cause greater concern.
    There are a number of justifications for this expansion. One is that by printing money, the central bank counters the contraction in credit being caused by private and banking sector deleveraging. By so doing, the monetary authority keeps the deflationary bogey at bay.
    But it also allows governments to issue debt at lower interest rates, reducing servicing costs and eroding the real value of the debt. Economists have described it as a form of stealth taxation, or debasement.
    It’s not an ideal way of proceeding, and it’s deeply unfair on savers, who through negative real interest rates are obliged in effect to subsidise both the Government and other debtors. It is, however, generally considered less painful than the alternative of even greater fiscal austerity.
    For the moment, it’s hard to argue that such actions are inflationary. Today’s relatively elevated levels of UK inflation are not directly caused by money-printing, but by devaluation and the spike in energy prices. The problem is not too much money, but not enough. Yet intuitively, one knows that some way down the line, such practices will have inflationary consequences which, once out of the box, will be extremely hard for central banks to put back in again.
    Only last week, the US Federal Reserve committed itself to keeping interest rates close to zero for another three years. By the time we get there, the US will have had seven years of essentially “free” money. Nobody knows what the long-term consequences of such financial repression might be. As I say, it’s never been tried before. But we do know from the way unduly loose monetary policy helped stoke the credit bubble in the first place that the potential for things to go very badly wrong is high. Central banks frequently seem to do more harm than good.
    In the US, credit conditions already seem to be easing. Recent evidence points to sustainable growth of some 2 to 3 per cent. As the economy normalises, so must interest rates. The fear must be that we’ve grown so used to and reliant on ultra-low rates that the economy won’t be able to tolerate anything else. The dangers are all too obvious.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/financialcrisis/9057320/Will-the-great-interest-rate-gamble-pay-off.html