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It's not only the energy markets that threaten the 'low inflation' data
now encouraging bondholders to keep buying...
THE PUBLISHED INFLATION DATA are surprisingly unsophisticated in so
far as they compare current prices with a snapshot a year earlier.
Just over a year ago, oil was every hedge fund manager's favorite speculation.
In summer 2008 a barrel got to well over $140, before falling sharply back.
That summer's high oil price had the effect of cancelling out the deflation
which was occurring elsewhere in the economy, as the first phase of the credit
crunch started to bite. It helped keep inflation up.
But by summer 2009, after hitting a trough of $30, the price was back down
around $65 representing an annual fall in the oil price of over 50%. Now it
was keeping the inflation figures down. Oil would continue to be below the
price of 12 month previous throughout the period from January '09 to September
'09.
Now - in the fall of 2009 - prices are more or less where they were a year
ago, but 12 months ago they were falling fast, while now they are rising. So
for the first time in over a year the effect of oil prices in the inflation
figures, in October/November 2009, will be up again. And by January, even if
prices don't continue to rise from here, the low prices of winter 2008/9 will
form the base. Oil will again be at twice the price it was a year earlier.
This will have a marked impact on inflation data.
It's not only the energy markets that threaten the "low inflation" data currently
encouraging bondholders to continue buying government debt paying little more
than 3.0% per year. There are well over two billion Chinese and Indians who
used to make the unwelcome but necessary market adjustments on the demand side
when world grain prices rose:
Some 30% of the world's population went hungry.
Until the current decade, that was an important part of how world demand came
into line with dips in world food production, before big price rises would
cause Westerners to feel the sharp pain of a world food shortage. But this
has now changed, and permanently.
The wealth and dollar reserves of the Asian countries are now large, and their
people are not going to go hungry in future (and quite right, too). Instead
they will be competing on world markets, and the price of grains will start
to show the very sharp spikes associated with unreliable supply and a newly
inelastic demand in critical commodities.
You may remember the food riots of early 2008, and how they seem to have disappeared.
Well, that occurred after a small dip in world grain production in 2007. Fortunately,
by its end, 2008 had turned into a bumper year for the global food harvest
and a serious crisis was averted. That bumper harvest brought global food prices
down again - but for how long?
Rice gives us a hint of the nature of price movements we should learn to expect.
From a stable base it spiked viciously upwards (by 300% and more) as it sucked
in speculative money during the 2008 panic. But when it fell back as panic
subsided, it still remained twice the original base level. It is from here
that the next upwards spike seems to be starting.
In a similar pattern sugar has already started to cool off a bit, but pepper
is in the earlier stages. At the end of August '09 it rose 17% in a week on
news of a poor crop arising from adverse weather in South East Asia.
Unlike camcorders, food is not a discretionary purchase and under the harsh
law of marginal utility - together with the new inelasticity of Asian demand
- even modest food shortages will cause sharp price spikes, and maybe more
riots, which indeed started to appear in Asia in September 2009, with tragic
consequences.
When necessities are in short supply people behave in the opposite way to
normal. Instead of reducing demand they tend to panic and stockpile food for
safety, perversely increasing demand on those higher prices...
This excerpt comes from a presentation made last month at the CLSA
Investors' Forum in Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore. Other speakers
included Marc Faber, Robert Fisk, Niall Ferguson and Jim Rogers. You can
receive the full report - Towards
Hyperinflation - for free today, plus a complimentary gram of gold,
stored securely in Zurich, Switzerland. Simply register
with BullionVault here...
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