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This editorial is a summary of why deflationists are wrong about being
at the cusp of a deflationary event. One article brought into the light
for discussing these points are from an article Mike Shedlock titled
“The Deflation Debate Heats Up: 10 Reasons Why Hyperinflation is
Coming”. In order to clarify definitions of inflation, deflation,
rising prices, declining prices etc. I want to define each term, as they
will appear in the article to avoid confusion. Further in the article, I
will address the Elliott Wave (NeoWave) count Glenn Neely has been
following and recently updated. His count supports the case for
hyperinflation, particularly after a bottom in the S&P is due around
2015 (with prices remaining above the 2002 lows) at the end of the
article.
Monetary
Inflation:
Occurs when monetary creation causes a surplus of cash chasing the same
number of goods.
Monetary
Deflation: Occurs when fiscal responsibility or a lack of monetary
creation causes a decline in total cash chasing the same number of
goods.
Commodity
Inflation: Occurs when a group of commodities in general are
declining in supply relative to a monetary pool, with or without
monetary inflation. This can include oil, cars, computer chips, wheat,
etc. etc.
Commodity
Deflation: Occurs when an excess number of commodities hit the
market relative to a monetary pool, with or without monetary deflation.
This can include oil, cars, computer chips, wheat, etc. etc.
1)
The first point Shedlock states is oil is deflationary.
Last week, I posted an article titled “Peak Oil
and What it Means to You” and the take home message is that
competition for resources is going to happen, first economically,
followed by military intervention as this century rolls out. I can not
remember a time in the 36 years of my life on the planet when oil was
deflationary.
The
oil shortages of the 70’s were politically inspired. The inflationary
trend at the peak saw housing prices decline 50% of the gain, yet they
remained well above the low prices of the 70’s. My parents bought
their second house in 1972 for $22,000. By 1980 it was approximately
$55,000.
The
current shortages in oil are a geological phenomenon, not a politically
inspired problem. As everyone is well aware, currency inflation is
occurring daily and now a coming shortage in oil will create commodity
inflation. Companies will only be able to absorb so much of the cost
before it inevitably is passed on to the consumer.
The
globe is now a village, with huge disparities between first world
nations and developing (rapidly approaching first world status)
salaries. Wages in the US will likely not drop, but will be eroded to a
near balance with Chinese and Indian (India) salaries in the future via
hyperinflation. So in response to Shedlock, wages will appear to decline
in purchasing power due to global economic imbalances…..but the US is
not the center of the Universe. A transfer of a portion of the US market
share of the global economy is underway as we speak. Nothing can be
done, particularly since the US now imports 60% of their daily energy
needs. Higher energy prices will be reflective of reduced supply and a
steady or increased demand from other countries.
2)
In the third point of the article Shedlock states "
Prices are going to rise in this "depression"? Why?".
China is a communist country where the government owns all the corporate
companies. The US consumer has aided in the huge trade imbalance with
China, essentially trading their land for beads, while the Chinese get a
boatload of US dollars. China has excess cash to deploy into financial
assets and since they are building a city the size of Philadelphia each
month, that requires resources. The Chinese government has been
expanding their fiat currency float at a rate of 20% per annum. The
liquidity and conversion of currencies around the globe quickly allows
this cash to be deployed to buy resources. Enter the US FED. If anyone
has not noticed, the US government is essentially carrying the US
economy, much the way the Chinese government is carrying theirs. So it
should come as no surprise the FED is essentially playing poker with
China, matching their currency debasement and adding more. The FED has
been creating money and keeping interest rates extremely low to allow
the velocity of money to create artificial growth.
Even
though the current economy is a credit bubble, the creation of money
automatically creates inflation as it feeds into the economy through
debt. I am not an accounting type, but I am sure their exists neat
little schemes for FED printed money to pick up struggling companies or
aid in transactions. Oil production is not increasing and monetary
expansion is occurring, therefore prices will rise due to shortfalls,
plain and simple. Factor in peak oil which is commodity inflation and
the inflationary pressures build even higher.
Assume
the automobile sector and housing sectors are commodities. There has
been overproduction during both these cycles and when a peak is hit,
prices will stabilize before plummeting. More supply than demand
dictates commodity deflation will occur (housing and automobile sector).
Notice how I am separating the terms of monetary inflation from commodity
inflation or deflation. A forest has many trees and plants,
so focusing on the whole for an objective answer is required. Housing
prices and automobile prices will decline sometime around 2007 until
2014/2015, 20% of the US job force depend on home building. Another 20%
depend on the automobile (parts, SuperLubes, auto manufacturers etc.).
There could be massive unemployment in the US, but they represent one
country on the planet. I think global oil production could suffer a
decline to 70 million barrels/day once things get rolling, but a 6%
economic decline year over year (YOY) coupled to a decline of global oil
supplies 10% YOY still places incredible supply limitations on the
supply of oil.
Resources
such as copper, silver etc. have been in a bear market since 1980, so
supplies are tight. I expect copper to hit $5/pound within 10 years due
to supply limitations and inflation. Supply and demand is key and 2
billion people trying to elevate their standard of living just a smidgen
puts additional pressure on the base metals and energy. The take home
message for point 2) is that supply/demand dynamics of commodities are
going to keep commodity inflation pressures high due to a shortage in
supply. There will be corrections along the way; normal market bull
markets experience retracements of 38.2%, 50% and 61.8%, pending the
stage of the bull market.
3)
They are going to bail and buy what? Euros? Pounds? Yen? Why, why, and
why?………………….
Tell me exactly what everyone is going to buy when they start bailing. Currently
the USD index appears to have completed and elongated flat (wave C
longer than wave A or B) and this pattern pretty much happens in
triangle formations only. A triangle has 5 legs and the first one for
the USD lasted 6 1/2 months. This translates into a USD remaining range
bound between 80.5 and current levels for another 24-28 months before
falling through 80. At this point people will buy gold and silver
bullion. They will line up like there is no tomorrow. A side point was
mentioned about a genetic breakthrough that could create investor's
returns of 5000% for people to plug money into things like this. I am in
biotech, so I would like to address this in two points. Point i):
American culture has become obsessed with obtaining maximum physical
output for minimal input. To prevent the diseases etc., the best one can
do is throw out their TV, hop on a tread mill, lift some weights, remove
excess sugar and pop from diets, each organic foods, or foods deemed
healthy. ii) In order for a drug to make it to market, there are three
clinical trials, 90% do not make it past Phase 1, and less than 15 %
actually get past Phase III to the market. Unless someone has an inside
edge on a product, investing in Phase III companies produces the least
amount of risk versus reward. I personally do not own any Biotech stocks
because of the inherent risk in getting a product to market and
lawsuits/class action suits that are always around the corner. Companies
must spend large amounts to ensure their intellectual property is not
being violated also, so I view this sector far more risky than resource
stocks with proven reserves in the ground. As an aside, I see generic
drug companies eventually taking larger shares of the market due to
reduced expenditures for launching a clinical trial required for Phase
I, II and III studies of a drug already understood and fully researched.
4)
Jim Puplava writes "6.
"The government takes over GSEs owning most American
mortgages." Shedlock responds
"Even assuming this happens, how does that lead to hyperinflation?
(See my answer to No. 7 for more clarification.)". Housing
prices will decline as per a commodity deflation. The basic goods of
energy, food, gold and silver (even base metals) are in short supplies
(world food levels can currently last from 51-53 days, decreasing YOY),
so the prices of these items will remain higher. If the banks eventually
own 20% of American homes and gas is turned off, the reduced demand may
counterbalance the declining supply for a few years. Natural market
forces will work this out in the years to come. Just because prices of
one sector of the economy declines does not mean that everything else
does. As an example, the Nasdaq and major markets in 2000 had severe
declines, wiping out 5 trillion dollars of equity, yet oil went from
$10/barrel to the recent high of $62/barrel during the correction and
since then.
5)
Jim Puplava writes, "A
national retirement security act is passed, forcing private pensions to
buy long-dated zero-coupon government bonds that will be inflated away.
The reason given will be for plan protection against bear markets."
Shedlock responds,
"Assume
such a bill is passed -- I seriously doubt it, but for the sake of
argument, I will assume it happens. Pray tell, exactly how is that
hyperinflationary? How and to what extent would it increase the money
supply or cause prices to rise?" By forcing individuals to buy
zero coupon bonds, the government has a larger pool of capital to reduce
the effects of their inflation agenda. For example, if the government
can forcibly collect $500 billion/year from pension funds, then it can
inflate at $500 billion per year without any net addition of capital to
the system. This directly does not cause hyperinflation, but rather
contains it. Knowing governments, they tend to take cushions as such for
granted and print currency beyond that limit and return to the process
of currency debasement.
6)
Jim Puplava writes, "
"As the U.S. economy goes into a hyperinflationary depression, the
rest of the world's economies follow suit. Money printing on a grand
scale occurs in Western and Asian economies as governments wrestle and
try to satisfy the demands of a social welfare state and an angry, aging
populace.". Shedlock responds, "The
entire world goes into a hyperinflationary depression at the same time.
Hmm. Do home prices head to infinity?". Housing prices are
likely to start declining around 2007 as mentioned above. Wages globally
or further credit extensions will have to rise for housing prices to
increase in price. Basic commodities mentioned throughout the article on
the other hand will increase in price due to shortages. Higher commodity
prices will cost governments more, so more currency will be printed to
secure resources. The US is most vulnerable to hyperinflation, because
if US dollars are rejected for purchasing oil, gold, silver or other
commodities on the open market, conversion to another currency (Euro,
Yen, Yuan, gold) will be required for the transaction to proceed. With
so many US dollars floating around in the future, further debasement
could create more USD required to buy one barrel of oil.
Gold
will return to the monetary environment to simply "peg" a
currency to an allowable limit of money (so many outstanding USD per
ounce of gold). After hyperinflation ravages the global economy,
deflation will set in, due to people having no more money to stimulate
the economy and a bubble closes the commodity bull market. This is a
prerequisite to deflation under the current global environment as I see
it. At this point, governments will be flat broke and the levels of
employment will quickly decline. Prices of things will decline most
likely due to rapid declines in the human population as described in the
prior article I wrote titled "Peak Oil and What it Means to
You". Peak oil will simply put prices of items out of the market;
transporting fresh vegetables from Mexico to Canada will cost too much
etc. etc. so a break down in the food transport chain will begin. Water
treatment plants will not likely be able to be completed due to
population declines or lack of funds.
Round-Up
The
above information if it has not proved convincing will hopefully be cast
in concrete with the following chart from the thread: http://woodrow.mpls.frb.fed.us/research/data/us/calc/hist1913.cfm
The Y
axis shows the cumulative inflation since 1913 till present. Notice that
rates were very low until they started creeping up around 1940. Going
off the gold standard in 1933 occurred when the US was in deflation due
to the contraction of money supply based upon a gold-backed currency. It
was not until World War II started those inflationary pressures
kick-started the economies. After 1973 when Nixon totally went off the
gold standard, inflation rates went up after a very short lag at a rate
indicated by the red line. When the severe recession of 1980 hit, there
was no evidence of inflation, actually there were three gap up years of
inflation. Around 1994 when the Fed started jigging the rate of
inflation, the trend of the points has drifted to the right of the red
line. Even with interest rates at half of what they really are, the
trend is your friend and it spells inflation. The trend of inflation has
occurred during booms, recessions, war, peace etc. Inflation is based
upon monetary expansion. No matter how much less people make, or how
cheap some finished goods get in price (due to oversupplyŕcommodity
inflation), the basic necessities of life, such as food, energy etc.etc.
when in a shortage from natural pressures are compounded when currency
inflation occurs.

Rapid
expansion of currencies in South American countries, Germany, China etc.
etc. has always resulted in hyperinflation. Since the US currency is
global, I think all currencies will be debased at a similar rate,
driving commodity prices to ridiculously high. The size of the bubble
and the global linkage of all currencies suggest the currency bubble
will continue to escalate. When all is said and done, owning physical
gold and silver will be important, because WHEN deflation hits AFTER
hyperinflation, they will retain their value relative to surrounding
assets falling precipitously.
Here
is one article further by Mike Shedlock that continues with his basic
arguments: http://www.safehaven.com/article-3010.htm
All of his top 10 reasons for deflation are NON-MONETARY events.
Elliott Wave (NeoWave)
Supports Hyperinflation
Glenn
Neely predicted the 1987 crash and stated the DOW would be over 10,000
by 2000. People then thought he was nuts, but were silenced from what
happened. His original forecast had the DOW hitting 100,000 around 2050,
but he made an incredible one change to his count in a time period of 15
years to having wave (III) from a top in 2000, with wave (IV) underway
until 2014-2017ish. A fifth wave is to follow, taking the DOW to
100,000. This sounds like a marvelous return at first, but compare that
to Weimar, Germany in the early 1920's. Their stock market went from 400
or so into the hundreds of millions by time hyperinflation had run its
course (their car company could have been purchased for an equivalent
amount of money to buy 300 of their cars). A DOW of 100,000 will not
mean much in hyperinflation because of currency debasement. For further
reading on Glenn Neelys longer term Wave count or his methodologies, I
would refer the reader to his book "Mastering Elliott Wave".
The
world has several huge hurdles that must be addressed in the coming
decade and the one way to ensure economic survival is to be invested in
resource stocks or companies that provide essential basic necessities to
life. The focus of this article has been directed at diatribes of the
deflationist camp and why it likely will not occur until hyperinflation
via currency inflation or commodity inflation runs its due course.
Deflationists have been wrong for 50 years and are likely going to be
proven wrong for the next 10-20 years. A broken clock is right twice a
day, but only once if it is in military time.

© 2005 David Petch
Editorial Archive
David
Petch
TreasureChests.info
Email
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