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WHERE'S
THE BEEF?
It Better Be in Your Freezer
by David Petch
www.treasurechests.info
April 8, 2008
Several different things I want to address first before getting to
analysis of the HUI. The first one has to do with meat. The governments
do not include the price of food or energy in the core rate of inflation
(soon they will be including those that lie in graveyards into their
index to further “average” the price down I am sure of it) so
everything that you or I have to buy in the grocery store no matter how
much costs rise is not “their definition of inflation”. This is the
government’s way of hiding the volumes of money being created out of
thin air.
The coming of Peak Oil
is causing a movement in the US to produce ethanol in order to provide
an alternate fuel source. The big corporations are pushing for corn
because it is big money. Use of straw grass, sugar beets etc. is far
more efficient in the energy balance of the production equation. More
energy is put into growing corn, fermenting it, distilling the ethanol
and transporting it that what will be generated in energy in the car.
Also, ethanol damages rubber gaskets, is corrosive and has a whole host
of problems. The biggest problem is that corn is a staple for many poor
families and also animal feed.
Higher prices for
animal feed translates into higher meat prices, cereal etc. The price of
corn has doubled the past year, so people should be expecting to see
meat in the supermarket rise by as much as 30-40% by year’s end. Sound
crazy? There is a fixed cost for animal feed and a doubling in corn
price will amount to a doubling of the percentage that goes to grow
cattle, pigs etc. for harvest.
More and more farmers
are going to be planting corn this year; there is only so much land
available for producing crops, so other crops such as soy, wheat,
barley, flax etc. etc. are going to also rise in price due to a
reduction in output with an ever increasing global demand. We are on the
cusp of seeing food inflation rise by 10-15% YOY for at least the next
4-5 years out.
At some point, high
natural gas prices looming in the background will make the cost of
fertilizer too expensive which will cause lower applications which will
result in lower crop yields. This will in turn drive the price of grains
and meat even higher, which is one reason many should consider buying
some arable land with access to an available water source. Note that the
price increases from peak natural gas have not even been factored into
the higher prices of meat or grains. Food will become so expensive that
the ethanol boom will absolutely collapse due to public demand for
“Food instead of Fuel”.
Right now, there is a
3-4 week window for meat prices to remain reasonably low due to excess
meat being sold on to the market and no new purchases of new feed
supplies. Everyone should own a chest freezer and should consider
loading up on different meats, fish etc. When the price of beef rises,
people will shift to chicken and fish until there is a balance of high
prices across the board. Sounds a bit like hoarding, but better to buy
now when the prices are lower, rather than buying stuff at a 30-40%
premium.
With Ethanol demand,
farmers are going to require holding larger and larger percentages of
their crop to ensure that enough feed is available for the animals and
for the following year’s planting. I think that the US could soon
become zero exporters of corn in the coming years, which will cause
severe hatred from Mexicans who rely on corn for tortillas, the primary
diet of the poor. Americans in general will not care about this, but how
will they feel when Mexico becomes a net oil importer by 2012??? This is
what will transpire for most countries that used to export food and
energy……when there is not enough for even their own populous, they
become classified as net importers of that item (corn, oil, wheat,
natural gas). Canada likely will stop selling natural gas to the US in
6-8 years when there is hardly any left, so nations will be fighting
among nations.
Wonder why so many
countries are secretly building so many detention centers? It is to try
and contain the have-nots of the populace. The North American populous
has never had to worry about famines, wars, and energy shortages, as
there has always been something to fall back on. Unfortunately, lack of
government insight and failure to follow through with the energy
policies puts in place during the 70’s are all but a dream now. When
the requirement for nuclear energy and other fuels are needed, the
infrastructure will not be there, which is why parts of North America
will be essentially walking with candles for 10-15 years until the dust
settles.
This portion of
today’s article highlights the need to plan for food storage as a part
of the strategy going forward in the coming 5-8 years. The peak energy
issue is going to literally occur like a big rock falling from the sky
and just sitting in the middle of the field; it will be there for all to
see. The implications will quickly be seen and the change in public
mindset will soon follow. The change will be a shift to “fight or
flight”, with emotion taking control. Preservation of capital will
jump to the forefront and with the US government stupidly trying to pull
the chain of a sleeping giant (China) is not going to help. China has
over 1 trillion USD on hand and if they play economic warfare,
hyperinflation in the US would occur sooner than most expect. Is China
playing fair? They are not playing fair with their currency and they are
trying to overcome IP issues, but with 1.2 billion people, it becomes
difficult to regulate things. Both parties are at fault, but when one
nation is a debtor and the other holds 1 trillion of your currency, they
dictate the rules and if not yet they soon will.
This is going to send
commodity stocks, gold and silver to the moon, which is why we have been
banging the table to build positions in bullion and energy/PM stocks.
When people are in a mad a frantic panic, they will pay “anything”
to save their dollars and by already preparing for what is in the pipe,
we can act in a mechanical fashion without falling into the “run with
the pack mentality”.

© 2007 David Petch
Editorial Archive
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