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When Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Ben Bernanke was President Bush's Chief
Economic Advisor, he described high oil prices as transitory. Transient they
were: they headed higher, not lower. In his testimony before Congress, Bernanke
now calls inflationary pressures transitory, predicting they will abate by
next year.
Bernanke's testimony, for the time being, has raised hopes again of a goldilocks
economy. And if the economy does not pan out as predicted, he has already indicated
that the turmoil in the Middle East would be at fault.
It has become apparent that the economy is slowing down. Homebuilders have
been increasingly reporting challenges; home sales and prices have started
to fall. Builders of luxury goods such as yachts have warned that even the
so-called high-end consumer is cutting expenditures. Even Target, the mass
retailer and catering to more affluent consumers has warned it cannot meet
its own targets. The message to the Fed is clear: rates are high enough to
induce a recession - raising rates any further will cause serious disruptions.
But it has also been very clear that inflation is rising. The cost of transportation
and apparel are amongst the leading culprits in pushing the consumer price
index (CPI) higher. And while energy prices even helped to reduce the CPI for
this report, oil prices were above $70 a barrel before the most recent escalations
in the Middle East. Inflation cannot be switched off like a light switch: while
inflation has been held back by globalization, it has not been eliminated.
As of a few months ago, the processors of raw materials suddenly have some
pricing power, and we would expect inflationary indicators to continue to go
up.
It comes as no surprise that Bernanke's testimony was perceived positively
by just about all markets: the stock market, the bond market, the gold market;
only the dollar fell.
A few weeks ago, Bernanke rattled the markets with his tough inflationary
talk. He was well aware already then that the economy was slowing, but inflationary
pressures were building. It was only too clear then already that hawkish talk
is about the most he could do, as increasing rates significantly would have
been detrimental to the economy.
Now, investors are excited that the Fed seems "done". Well, the Fed does not
have much of a choice - there is simply too much leverage in the economy through
consumer debt. "Typically" the economy peaks before inflation peaks; unfortunately,
we do not live in typical times. With stimulus after stimulus to keep the American
consumer spending, global overproduction has lead to inflationary pressures
everywhere. However, even 0% financing offers for 5 years or longer by car
manufacturers cannot get consumers go out and buy another car. The consumer
is exhausted, needs a recession.
Gold rose on Bernanke's testimony. The buyers of gold believe we are entering
a period of stagflation, and that the Fed will ease before inflation is contained.
His testimony confirmed that indeed the economy is more important to the Fed
than price stability.
Bernanke will face many more "transient" challenges in the coming months and
years. In his verbal testimony, Bernanke seemed less comfortable than in the
past. We would not be surprised if the markets will take a less benign interpretation
of Bernanke's testimony once they realize the path we are on. The only area
in the economy that seems to be making significant money is the investment
banking sector: rather than employing their cash to invest, corporate America
is using their cash to engineer mergers, acquisitions and other financial transactions.
Corporate America is hesitant to invest their cash domestically as they see
the US consumer slowing down and better investment opportunities overseas.
After a significant slide in April and May, the dollar has had some relief.
While a drop in consumer spending may help to alleviate the enormous US current
account deficit as it increases savings, we are concerned that it will
be dwarfed by foreigners' reluctance to finance the deficit as the US economy
slows; foreigners might be tempted to invest their money elsewhere as the US
economy slows. We may see the growth in the current account deficit abate just
as the dollar resumes its fall.
We manage the Merk Hard Currency Fund, a fund that seeks to profit from a
potential decline in the dollar. To learn more about the Fund, or to subscribe
to our free newsletter, please visit www.merkfund.com.
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