NEW YORK (Fortune) -- You might expect Jim Rogers to be gloating a
little bit. After all, the famed investor has been predicting a
recession in the U.S. economy for months and shorting the shares
of now-tanking Wall Street investment banks for even longer. And
with fears of a recession sparking both a worldwide market
sell-off and
emergency
action from Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke, Rogers
again looks prescient - just as he has over the past few years as
the China-driven commodities boom he predicted almost a decade ago
began kicked into high gear. But when I reached him by phone in
Singapore the other day there was little hint of celebration in
his voice. Instead, he took a serious tone.
"I'm extremely worried," he says. "I have been for
a while, but I just see things getting much worse this time around
than I expected." To Rogers, a longtime Fed critic,
Bernanke's decision to ride to the market's rescue with a
75-basis-point cut in the Fed's benchmark rate only a week before
its scheduled meeting (at which time they cut it another 50 basis
points) is the latest sign that the central bank isn't willing to
provide the fiscal discipline that he thinks the economy
desperately needs.
"Conceivably we could have just had recession, hard times,
sliding dollar, inflation, etc., but I'm afraid it's going to be
much worse," he says. "Bernanke is printing huge amounts
of money. He's out of control and the Fed is out of control. We
are probably going to have one of the worst recessions we've had
since the Second World War. It's not a good scene."
Rogers looks at the Fed's willingness to add liquidity to an
already inflationary environment and sees the history of the 1970s
repeating itself. Does that mean stagflation? "It is a real
danger and, in fact, a probability."
Where the opportunities are
The 1970s, of course, was when Rogers first made his reputation -
and a lot of money - as George Soros's original partner in the
Quantum Fund. And despite his gloomy outlook for the U.S., he
still sees opportunities in today's world. In fact, he sees the
recent correction as a potential gift for investors who know where
to head in global markets: China.
Rogers has been fascinated with China ever since he rode his
motorcycle across the country two decades ago, and he's been a
full-fledged China bull for several years. In December he
published his latest book, an investor-friendly tome titled
"A Bull in China: How to Invest Profitably in the World's
Greatest Market." And that same month he sold his beloved
Manhattan townhouse for $15.75 million to a daughter of oil tycoon
H. L. Hunt and moved his family full-time to Singapore - the
better to be closer to the action in Beijing and Shanghai. (He
bought the New York mansion 30 years ago for just over $100,000;
not a bad return on his investment.)
But in a November
interview
I conducted with Rogers, he admitted that he was rooting for a
serious correction in China to cool off an overheating market and
bring back prices to a reasonable level. With the bourses in
Shanghai and Hong Kong both some 20% off their recent highs as of
late January, Rogers says he's starting to consider new
investments.
"I'm delighted to see what's happening in Shanghai and Hong
Kong," he says. "As I've said, if things hadn't cooled
off, the Chinese market was in danger of turning into a bubble. I
find this most encouraging. The government's been doing its best
to try and cool things off. Mainly they've been trying to deal
with real estate but it's having an effect on stocks, too. I would
suspect the correction isn't quite over in China. But I'm gearing
up. I didn't put in any orders for tomorrow but I'm starting to
prepare my list of things to buy in China. Whether I buy this week
or this month or this quarter, who knows. But I'm starting to
think about buying new shares in China for the first time in a
while. And I'm not thinking about buying in America."
Ultimately, Rogers doesn't think that the troubles in the United
States will be much of a drag on the prospects for the People's
Republic. "Anybody who sells to Sears (
SHLD,
Fortune
500) or Wal-Mart (
WMT,
Fortune
500) is going to be affected, without question," he says.
"Some parts of the Chinese economy are going to be untouched,
however. They won't even know America's in recession. They won't
care if America falls off the face of the earth."
What's on his China buying list? Rogers says it will depend in
large part on which stocks come down to the right level, but he's
keeping his eye on certain high-growth sectors including tourism,
agriculture, power generation and airlines.
The pullback in commodity prices on recession fears hasn't
dampened his enthusiasm for resources investments, either. More
like a cyclical correction in the middle of a long-term bull
market. "Certainly some commodities are going to be
affected," says Rogers. "But it's not as if the markets
haven't figured this out. Remember the old expression: 'Dr. Copper
is the best economist in the world.' Well, Dr. Nickel and Dr. Zinc
figured out a few months ago what I thought I had figured out,
that we were going to have a recession. Nickel is already down
50%. Other commodities may fall more. But I don't see the
economics of agriculture being much affected at all. Maybe there
will be a few less cotton shirts bought. Maybe there will be a few
less tires bought. But the supply is under more duress than the
demand."
Once again Rogers draws on the 1970s in his analysis. "Think
about the story of gold in the '70s," he says. "Gold
went up 600%, and then it started correcting. It went down nearly
every month for two years, nearly 50% from the high point. And
everybody said, 'Well, that's the end of the gold market. It was
just a fluke. It's over.' It scared everybody out. And then gold
turned around and went up 850% from that level. This is what
happens in markets. But the fundamentals of the secular bull
market in commodities are not over any more now than they were for
gold in the '70s."
Where he expects the pain to be most intense is on Wall Street. He
says he hasn't covered his short positions on the investment banks
or Citigroup (
C,
Fortune
500) and won't for a while. "Those things are going to go
way, way, way down," says Rogers. "The investment banks
are down now because of the problems in the credit market. Wait
until the effects of the bear market come along. If you just go
back and look at other bear markets, investment bank stocks have
gone down enormously. We haven't gotten to that stage yet. It's
going to bring their balance sheets under duress. This is going to
get much worse. But that's where there have been excesses for the
past decade or so. And whenever you have a bear market come along
the great excesses of the previous period are the ones that get
cleaned out the most."
He'll be watching - from Singapore.