Inflation stories starting to surface

Deflation has been all the rage the past few month as bond prices continue to astound bringing yields down, and analysts like David Rosenberg at Gluskin Scheff turn out to have been right. And, I admit, I too have been in the deflation camp, arguing that a global slowdown, and a Chinese slowdown especially, will cap any upward price pressures. I’m still in that camp, but not as adamant as I used to be. There are a few major trends on the horizon that are starting to tilt me to the other camp.

The first is structural. Globally, governments are all in stimulative mode, trying to outdo each other on the easing fronts. Japan is the classic story of the government continually being thwarted with higher yen, but if there’s one thing a government can do effectively is devalue the currency, so I expect the government to eventually win. But Japan is not alone. Ireland is issuing debt to itself, in an apparent twist on the ponzi scheme – in the Irish version, they’re actually pyramid-ing themselves, without bringing in new investors. Hmmm. Probably not going to work out well for them. The US too is in easing mode, which will eventually mean yields will rise. So, while I’m not in the inflation scare camp yet, global easing continues to make me fear fiat currencies.

Then, there are the stories, apparently unrelated, but sounding incredibly similar. Coffee prices up by a third in the past few months as reported by the WSJ. How about Russia banning exports of wheat, sending the prices higher? What about gold hitting new highs? Check out the corn ETF:

True, energy hasn’t skyrocketed, but it also hasn’t broken down in the face of global slowdown. How about POT getting Chinese interest? Or the increase in rare earth materials? For now, a lot of these prices moves are supply disruptions and not being driven by demand, but could they lead to an increase in consumer prices and a flight to “needs” in the near future? Very possibly and it’s something to keep an eye on. For now, economic slowdown and consumer retrenchment are the orders of the day, as is debt deflation (coming soon) on the corporate and sovereign sides, and depressed equity valuations. But at least on a relative basis, if not on an absolute basis, the recent moves in the above mentioned markets might give us insight into where to invest.

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