Coping Strategies for These 4 Possible ETF Bubbles | ETF Trends

Investment bubbles have been a fact of life for centuries, and the 21st century is no different. There are potential bubbles forming in several areas, and exchange traded fund (ETF) investors need to be on the alert and ready with a coping strategy.

Gold, oil, stocks and government bonds have experienced large run-ups that have put prices above their historic averages and some feel that these levels aren’t being justified by fundamentals, comments Shawn Tully for Fortune. [How to spot and avoid bubbles.]

Observers have pointed to that low interest rates that have inundated banks with funds that are basically there to be loaned out cheaply to bid up assets. However, there are some like Allan Meltzer, the distinguished monetarist at Carnegie Mellon, who argue that we are in a credit crunch and banks aren’t lending out all that extra cash.

Tully cautions investors to note of the possibility of overpriced valuations in the four different assets.

Treasuries. The 10-year Treasury is now 3.6%, below the 5.5% average rate between 1993 and 2007 when inflation was at around 3%. If inflation is 3% now, that would put the real rate after inflation of the Treasury note at 0.6%. As the economy recovers, the threat of inflation will also cause the Fed to increase rates – when yields rise, bond prices fall. [Good times in bond ETFs coming to an end?]

  • iShares Lehman 7-10 Yr Treasury Bond Fund (NYSEArca: IEF)

Oil. Oil may be hovering between $70 to $80 a barrel, which has oil companies making a nice profit with the cost of production at around $55 to $60 a barrel. It is logical that oil companies would want to make more money, so they drill more oil until the high demand meets the low supply, which would ultimately bring oil prices down. [Oil prices step back.]

  • United States Oil (NYSEArca: USO)

Gold. Inflationary fear and a declining dollar has a lot of investors flocking to gold. Now that gold has been pushed up beyond the $1,000 level, a lot of ordinary people are selling jewelry and other gold items to capitalize on the high prices. The last time a similar situation occurred, it was  silver in the 1980s; silver prices dropped from $50 to $15 less than a year. [Why gold may still have some life.]