Fed's Dangerous Game
is Commodities' Gain by Mike Burnick
Last week, markets
were surprised — and inflation hawks shocked — to see core consumer prices post the biggest monthly gain
since 2009 ... surprise, surprise!
Now, we all know the flawed Consumer Price Index does a
lousy job capturing the actual rate of inflation. That's because it downplays too
many real-world costs that are spiraling ever higher, including health care and
education.
But now, even the "official" inflation numbers are
accelerating to the upside.
Take travel costs ... auto insurance jumped 4.8 percent year
over year in May, hotel costs are up 5 percent, and airfares surged nearly 6
percent higher. Expect your summer
vacation to cost more this year!
And what about soaring food prices, which jumped the most
last month in nearly three years: Eggs are up 10 percent, bacon rose 15.3
percent, while citrus and coffee prices
are likewise soaring this year. Your well-balanced breakfast is a lot more
expensive than a year ago!
Fed discounts inflation danger
The year-over-year change in CPI has more than doubled in
less than one year. That's clear evidence that inflation is already simmering
and may soon boil-over.
From an investment perspective, commodities are the likely
winners from the Fed's dangerous game.
With the unemployment rate steadily declining and inflation
now suddenly at the top of the Federal
Reserve's comfort zone, you would think Fed officials would be growing concerned about ultra-easy money policies
stoking more inflation ... but you'd be
wrong.
Concluding a two-day policy meeting last Wednesday, it was business-as-usual
as Fed chief Janet Yellen quickly dismissed the inflationary CPI report as
"noise."
Long ago, economist Milton Freidman warned that
"inflation is always and everywhere"
the result of excess money growth. In the 1970s, the Federal Reserve
ignored this principle ... and a decade
of stagflation was the result.
The Fed is playing a
very dangerous game because ignoring simmering inflation today won't make it go away; it will only fan fears
of future inflation all the more.
Do you own any of these 6 winners? If not, you might want to buy them as soon as
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Adding fuel to fire
True, deflation has for the most part had the upper-hand in
the global economy since 2008. And money
velocity — or the turnover of dollars in our economy — has been unusually weak in recent years.
But the Fed has exploded its balance sheet to more than $4
trillion, with $2.5 trillion sloshing
around the banking system as excess reserves.
This is like high octane rocket-fuel just waiting to ignite
much greater inflation once the velocity
of money does pick up.
From an investment perspective, commodities are the likely
winners from the Fed's dangerous game.
The evidence has been plain to see all year, and especially last week after the
Fed ignored the uptick in CPI.
There is a growing unease that the Fed is hopelessly behind the curve on inflation, and
commodities markets sense it!
Gold jumped 3.25
percent, the biggest gain in nine months. Silver soared even more, up 6.9
percent. Although precious metals may be the most obvious beneficiaries, they
aren't alone in posting strong gains so far this year.
Crude oil is up 7.9 percent year to date while natural gas
has gained 5.6 percent.
Gold is up 9.5 percent, platinum 5.5 percent and palladium
jumped 13.5 percent.
Corn is up 5.5 percent, sugar 9.3 percent and coffee is up a
stunning 56 percent just since January 1st!
In fact, the broad-based CRB Commodity Price Index is up
11.4 percent so far this, well ahead of
the stock market's return with the Dow up just 2.6 percent year to date!
Consider the uptrend
of inflation and commodity prices; it's a good idea to consider adding more
commodities, or at least
commodity-related stocks to your portfolio mix. One way to accomplish this with
a single trade is an ETF like the Market Vectors Natural Resources ETF (HAP),
which provides a diverse mix of natural
resource stocks that are tracked by the Rogers-Van Eck Hard Assets Producers
Index.
The index was developed in concert with legendary investor
Jim Rogers, former co-manager with George Soros of the famed Quantum Fund, and
author of numerous investment books
including: Hot Commodities. Rogers is a
recognized expert on hard asset investing and his index is viewed by many as
the best benchmark for commodity stocks.
HAP includes 341 of the world's largest and most prominent
companies engaged in the production and distribution of hard asset commodities.
As of March 31, 40 percent of the ETF was invested in the red-hot Energy
sector, 39.6 percent in Materials, 9.5 percent in Consumer Staples and 5.5
percent in Industrials.
This is one ETF with the potential to be a very big winner
as the Fed plays its dangerous game with
inflation.
Source: Money & Markets, Mike Burnick, June 26, 2014
email.
Comments
Real inflation has been holding at 10% per year, but the
uptick of the phony CPI just confirms that it won’t settle down. The Fed is not likely to jump interest rates
or back off their money printing, but “stagflation” like the 1970s continues to
dominate.
Our high real unemployment, our 37% workforce
nonparticipation, continues. We will not be able to ring this down unless we
drastically reduce the immigration of low wage refugees. Dumb legal and illegal
immigration policies have delivered 1 to 2 million foreign job seekers since
1989 and this build-up continues.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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