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"A trend in motion, will stay in motion, until some major outside force, knocks
it off its course." After gyrating within a sideways trading range over the
past 18-months, the "Commodity Super Cycle," measured by the Dow Jones-AIG
Commodity Index, (DJCI), resumed its upward course in the second half or 2007.
Led by the agricultural, energy, and precious metal sectors, the DJCI closed
at an all-time high.
According to famed hedge-fund trader Jimmy Rogers, the 20th century has seen
three secular bull-markets in commodities from 1906-1923, and from 1933-1955,
and 1968-1982, spanning an average of 15-years. The current bull market for
the DJCI is now six-years old, and Mr Rodgers thinks the "Commodity Super Cycle" has
many more years to run, albeit with some nasty corrections along the way.
The latest commodities boom began at the end of 2001, when China's industrial
revolution was just starting. China's voracious appetite for raw materials
for its industrialization has made it the #1 consumer of copper, steel, and
iron ore in the world, consuming more of theses metals than the United States
and Japan combined, and ranking #2 in consumption of oil and energy products.
And China's population of 1.3 billion has become the world's #1 consumer of
soybeans.
Evidence of an impressive bull-run is stacking up, with crude oil surging
60% to $96 per barrel in 2007, and tripling since late 2003. Platinum climbed
34% to an all-time record high of $1,550 /oz, and if the world's 500 million
cars were fitted with fuel cells, the world's platinum supply would be exhausted
in 15-years. Copper was a laggard, with a 10% gain, but is still five times
higher since 2003, hitting a record $8,800 /ton in 2006, while lead and tin
are now at historic highs.

Agricultural commodities joined the party in 2007, with wheat futures in Chicago
climbing +77%, as global demand outpaced supply, soybeans up +79%, corn up
+16%, and rice futures were up +35 percent. A weaker US dollar makes American
grain prices less expensive to buyers abroad, and US wheat exporters already
have sold more than 90% of the 1.18 billion bushels the US Department of Agriculture
expects will be exported during the whole marketing year, which ends in June
2008.
Rough rice futures in Chicago soared to all-time highs, led by strong export
demand and weather-related Asian crop shortages in India, the world's second-largest
rice exporter, and in Vietnam, the third-largest shipper. Global rice supplies
fell 6.5% in the fourth quarter alone to 72.1 million tons, and according to
latest estimates, supplies are headed down to 50 million tons, the lowest level
since 1983-84.
Food prices are 18% higher in China from a year ago, and the Communist kingpins
in Beijing, fear that runaway inflation could ignite social unrest. The price
of pork, which forms the core of most Chinese diets, was up a staggering 56%. "We're
facing a grave situation," said Ma Kai, the country's top planner. China has
a fifth of the world's population, with 1.3 billion people using 7% of the
world's farmland.

Zheng Guogan, head of the State Meteorological Administration forecasts global
warming will cut China's annual grain harvest by up to 10 percent. That would
mean about 50 million tons less grain in the current tight supply situation
and a potential for further food inflation in world markets. "Given the tightened
food supply in the international market, a decline in domestic grain production
could lead to more price hikes," said Song Tingmin, VP of the China National
Association of Grain.
The US Department of Agriculture has also cut its estimate of world wheat
stocks for 2007-08 to 112.4 million tons, a 30-year low. If sustained, sharply
higher wheat prices will eventually work their way into the grocery aisle for
bread, cereal, cookies and other products. Fearing a further rise in prices,
India, Pakistan, Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, Indonesia and Iraq have all booked
large cargoes of wheat.
And it's not just the Fed's weak US dollar policy that is driving up agricultural
prices to record highs these days. Growing Bio-fuel demand has pushed up corn
and soybean prices, and creating a linkage with crude oil. Furthermore, the
cost of transporting dry goods such as coal, iron ore, and grains overseas,
as measured by the Baltic Dry Index, have doubled from a year ago. Higher transportations
costs, by land or by sea, are expected to be eventually passed along to the
final consumer.
Riding on the wings of the "Commodity Super Cycle" and global inflation was
the glittering Gold market, up 32% in 2007. Gold was energized by reckless
central bankers and the explosive growth of the world's money supply. In Australia,
the M3 money supply rose 20.7% from a year ago, Brazil's M3 +17%, Canada's
M3 +12.9%, China's M2 +18.5%, the Euro zone's M3 +12.3%, Hong Kong's M3 +31.5%,
India's M3 +21.5%, and the USA's M3 +15.8%, a 47-year high.
Chinese and Indian Imports fuel "Commodity Super Cycle"
Maybe, the longevity of the "Commodity Super Cycle," boils down to one simple
equation. According to the latest population count by the United Nations, the
world had 6.5 billion inhabitants in 2005, 380 million more than in 2000, or
an annual gain of 76 million persons. By 2050, the world is expected to house
9.1 billion persons, assuming declining fertility rates. So a world of finite
raw materials, along with an increasing population base, translates into higher
commodity prices. China and India house one-third of the world's population
with 2.3 billion inhabitants.

In an ironic twist, China has become a victim of its own phenomenal success.
China's economy expanded at a blistering 11.5% last year, but was plagued with
a 7% inflation rate, largely linked to the country's voracious appetite for
global commodities. China's imports climbed 20.5% to $865.5 billion in the
first 11-months of 2007, from the year earlier period, and Chinese demand effectively
put a floor under the DJCI, whenever panicky commodity traders in London, New
York, Tokyo, or Shanghai got the urge to turn paper profits into cash.

To combat consumer inflation, the People's Bank of China (PBoC) has tightened
its monetary policy, ordering banks to set aside 14.5% of their deposits as
reserves, an all-time high. The PBoC also raised bank lending rates five times
to 7.47%, and announced a special bond sale of 750 billion yuan to drain cash
from the financial system. The latest tightening moves took some steam out
of the Shanghai stock index, which still ended 97% higher last year, the world's
gold medal winner.
Then on Dec 27th, China's central bank signaled it would allow the yuan to
appreciate faster in 2008, in a move designed to lower the cost of dollar denominated
commodities imported from overseas. Yao Jingyuan, chief economist of the state
statistics agency, explained, "The weakening dollar and rising global commodity
prices would create inflationary pressures for China next year, but a quicker
appreciation of the yuan would probably help offset some of those price increases."

But a stronger yuan vs the US$ will also boost China's purchasing power abroad,
and could exert more upward pressure on commodity prices worldwide. And China
must compete with India, the world's second fastest growing economy, with one
billion consumers for global commodities. India's imports rose to $20.8 billion
in October, up from $4.6 billion in February 2004, also supporting the commodity
markets.
Interestingly enough, India could face a supply shortfall of about 4-million
tons of rice in 2008, threatening to turn the world's largest exporter of rice
into a net importer. With tight supplies of wheat this year, Indian demand
for rice could grow to 96 million tons or higher, and above the rice crop of
92 million tons last year. India is also Asia's third-largest oil consumer,
and imported 9.25 million tons of crude oil in November, or 2.8 mil barrels
per day, up 6.5% from a year ago.
Bernanke Fed Re-Ignites "Commodity Super Cycle" in 2007
For 24-months until June 2006, the Federal Reserve embarked on a long, but
predictable road of lifting short-term US interest rates, to reach an unknown "neutral
rate," that would neither stimulate nor weaken the US economy. The Fed was
also tracking the "Commodity Super Cycle" and appeared to have finally gotten
ahead of the inflation curve with its last rate hike to 5.25% in June 2006.
"The Fed will be vigilant to ensure that the recent pattern of elevated monthly
core inflation readings is not sustained," declared Fed chief Ben "B-52" Bernanke
at the International Monetary Conference on June 6, 2006. "The Fed must continue
to resist any tendency for increases in energy and commodity prices to become
permanently embedded in core inflation," he said, telegraphing the last rate
hike to 5.25%.

The 2-year cycle of Fed rate hikes was the longest in a quarter of a century,
and finally put a dent in the "Commodity Super Cycle." Crude oil tumbled $30
per barrel, and gold fell $160 /oz in the second half of 2006. The Fed had
finally corralled the "Commodity Super Cycle", and put the fed funds rate on
ice for 15-months. The Fed relied on other G-20 central banks to tighten their
monetary policies to keep the "Commodity Super Cycle," in check, while it sat
on the sidelines.
However, other G-20 central banks were reluctant to tighten their money spigots,
and only lifted their lending rates in tiny baby-steps, that failed to rein-in
double digit credit and money supply growth. Central bankers were clandestinely
inflating their economies to prosperity, by pumping up stock markets with monetary
steroids, and in turn, hoping to bolster consumer confidence and spending.
However, the bursting the $1.8 trillion sub-prime credit bubble in the summer
of 2007, rattled the Bernanke Fed into a series of rate cuts totaling 1% to
4.25%. The Fed's aggressive rate cutting campaign knocked the US dollar index
to 20-year lows, and ignited the fastest money supply growth in 47-years, with
US M3 hitting an annualized 16% in November, while the narrower MZM money supply
soared to +12.8% higher from a year earlier.

Because most international commodities are traded in US dollars, the Fed must
defend the value of the US dollar in the foreign exchange market, with higher
interest rates if necessary, to keep the "Commodity Super Cycle" in check.
But with the Fed moving in the opposite direction, and slashing the fed funds
rate to 4.25%, the US central bank let the inflation genie out of its bottle,
awakening the "Commodity Super Cycle" from its 18-month siesta.
Thus, the finger of blame for global inflation points to the Bernanke Fed
and the US Treasury, for engineering the devaluation of the US dollar in the
second half of 2007. Traders should only trust the money that flows thru the
commodity markets for real time indications of future inflation, and not government
statistics, which are manipulated by apparatchniks and adopted as gospel by
the mainstream media.

Money supply growth is explosive, at a time when inflation is rearing its
ugly head across the globe, led by sharply higher food and energy prices. European
and US central bankers are intellectually dishonest about food and energy prices,
routinely subtracting the "essentials of life" from their inflation equations,
reckoning that commodity price spikes are self-correcting, due to the laws
of gravity, and shouldn't be countered with higher interest rates.
In the US, producer prices were 7.7% higher in November from a year ago, the
highest in 34-years. Consumer prices rose at an annual rate of 4.2% through
the first 11-months of 2007, the most in 17-years, thanks to soaring food and
energy prices. Yet remarkably, federal funds futures traders in Chicago are
betting on a quarter-point Fed rate cut to 4.00% on January 30th, to bail out
Wall Street bankers from massive losses in sub-prime mortgages, despite dangerously
elevated inflation.
There's a big difference between the way US households and the Fed view inflation.
To the average household, food and energy prices are the most closely watched
costs. To the Fed, food and energy are subject to cyclical swings and ignored. "If
inflation expectations are well anchored, changes in energy and food prices
should have relatively little influence on core inflation," Fed chief Ben "B-52" Bernanke
told the National Bureau of Economic Research on July 10th, 2007.
So far, investment banks and brokers have recognized $97 billion of losses,
related to the collapse of the $1.8 trillion sub-prime mortgage market. That
could just be the tip of the iceberg of bank write downs for 2008. But additional
Fed rate cuts could weaken the US dollar, and unleash the fastest rate of inflation
and money supply growth that the world has seen in decades, - leading to the "Stagflation" trap.
European Central Bank fuels Global Inflation
Under the leadership of Jean "Tricky" Trichet, the European Central Bank has
veered far away from its monetarist roots and its original 4.5% growth target
for Euro M3. Since Trichet got his hands on the printing presses in November
2003, the Euro M3 money supply has exploded from a 5% growth rate to an annualized
12.3% in October, its fastest in history, lifting the Euro zone's inflation
rate to a six-year high of 3.1%, and far above the ECB's target of 2%.
Trichet has immunized the Euro zone stock markets from record high oil prices
with carefully calibrated dosages of monetary morphine. The ECB engineered
an 11% Euro rally against the US dollar in 2007, by running the printing presses
at a slightly slower pace than the Bernanke Fed. Still, North Sea Brent crude
oil rose to a record 65 euros per barrel, and European wheat futures closed
at 248 euros, posting a 68% gain on the Paris-based Euronext exchange.
ECB chief Trichet and his sidekick Bundesbank chief Axel Weber have forgotten
the sound advice of the late ECB chief Wim Duisenberg, "Trying to use monetary
policy to fine-tune economic activity or asset markets, or to gear it above
a sustainable level will, in the long run, simply lead to rising inflation
- not to faster economic growth," Duisenberg warned on Sept 5, 2003, just before
he retired from the ECB.

With Euro zone inflation getting out of control, Trichet and Weber are conducting "open-mouth" operations
thru the media, talking tough and making bold threats, but taking no action
to tighten monetary policy. European gold traders have seen through the ECB's
propaganda and empty rhetoric, and are bidding 570 euros for an ounce of gold,
up 75% from just three years ago.
Writing in Germany's Bild am Sonntag newspaper on Dec 31st, Bundesbank chief
Axel Weber said that high energy and food prices would keep inflation elevated
through the first half of 2008, but warned European workers not to ask for
higher wages to compensate for the higher cost of living. "The current, unusually
high inflation rates in Germany and the Euro zone must not be the yardstick
for the next wage round. A spike in prices as a result of excess wage rises
can endanger medium-term price stability. We would act decisively against this," he
warned.
"Our primary goal is to preserve price stability. We are alert and everybody
must know that we will do whatever is needed to deliver price stability in
the medium term and be credible in that delivery. The single needle in our
compass is price stability," warned ECB chief Trichet on Dec 14th. But alas,
the ECB's compass has been broken for three years, with Euro money and credit
expanding at double digit rates.
How are we to interpret the ECB's latest riddles, designed to keep commodity
and gold speculators off balance. Would the ECB actually hike its repo rate
to 4.25% to rein-in its money supply, when other G-7 central bankers in Canada,
England, and the US are lowering their lending rates? That's doubtful. Yet
the ECB would look like a hawk, by simply resisting the temptation to follow
the rate-cutting Bernanke Fed and the Bank of England, by leaving its repo
rate unchanged at 4.00 percent.

Still, "the persistence of the current inflation shock entails the serious
risk that inflation expectations could become unhinged and our credibility
as central bankers could be significantly damaged," Bank of Spain chief Miguel
Angel Fernandez Ordonez warned. Spain's consumer price index soared to +4.1%
in November. "We are monitoring the situation very closely, and are permanently
alert. Central bankers, even the best ones, cannot prevent an increase of oil
prices or other international commodities," said Belgian central banker Guy
Quaden on Dec 13th.
That's music to the ears of global commodity traders, and why the world economy
could be headed for hyper-inflation. "Central bankers always try to avoid their
last big mistake. So every time there's the threat of a contraction in the
economy, they'll over stimulate the economy, by printing too much money. The
result will be a rising roller coaster of inflation, with each high and low
being higher than the preceding one," said Milton Friedman, the late Nobel
monetarist.
"Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon. As the government
increases the rate at which it prints money, the result is too much money chasing
too few goods and services. Higher wages don't cause inflation, and the whopping
oil price increases between 1973 and 1980 didn't cause the stagflation, - a
stagnant economy with rising inflation. Rather, the oil price hikes were the
form inflation took" from rapid money supply growth, Friedman and Anna Schwartz
argued.
Gold is a Safe Haven during US Banking Crisis
Nowadays, bankers are so afraid to lend money to each other, that they prefer
to park their excess cash in "safe haven" Treasury bills and notes, even at
negative rates of return, after adjusting for inflation. Big banks are reluctant
to lend money in the LIBOR market, because of suspicions that borrowers might
be holding big undisclosed losses in toxic sub-prime mortgages.
Global banks are also hoarding cash to plug future losses that must be written
off their balance sheets in the year ahead. The fear factor in the banking
system is measured by the TED spread, which is the difference for yields on
US$ Libor rates (ie Eurodollar rates) and for US Treasury bills. Since August,
there have been two eruptions in the TED spread that lifted US$ Libor rates
to +210 basis points above 3-month Treasury bills rates, the highest since
the 1987 stock market crash.

Gold has done a reasonable job of tracking widening credit spreads between
Libor rates and Treasury bills, and acting as a safe haven in a time of risk-aversion
in the stock markets. Yet the same sophisticated bankers that bought $1.8 trillion
of toxic sub-prime mortgages over the past few years are now locking in 10-year
bond yields below the inflation rate, even though hyper-inflation might lie
on the horizon.
When measured in "hard money" terms, the US Treasury's 10-year Note lost 20%
of its value compared to an ounce of gold since August 2007. Wouldn't it make
better sense to park excess cash in gold, rather than US Treasury IOU's, during
periods of double-digit money supply growth, and soaring commodities?
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