Should Investors Take Notice When Reward Prospects Diminish?

 | Apr 17, 2016 01:54AM ET

The world’s central banks devise conventional and unconventional ways to depress interest rates. The impact? Consumers purchase goods and services on credit with favorable financing terms. Corporations issue low-yielding debt in order to buy back shares of their own stock. And governments issue low-yielding treasuries to continue spending far more than they generate in tax revenue.

For some investors, then, the only thing that matters in the determination of whether to acquire assets like stock and real estate is ultra-low interest rate policy . On the other hand, what if the macro-economic environment is deteriorating? Should investors ignore wavering home sale trends, declining consumer sentiment, faltering retail developments, floundering total business sales, weakening economic growth on the domestic front as well as economic stagnation on the world stage?

When things are getting worse, investors ought to take notice. Why? Because the central banks may not be capable of arresting the development of bear market declines indefinitely.

In spite of ever-decreasing mortgage rates over the last year, do pending home sales appear to be accelerating or decelerating? They seem to be getting worse to me. Perhaps real estate asset prices have climbed to a level that even a 3.5% 30-year mortgage cannot fix.