
The Rude Awakening Wall Street, New York Wednesday, April 13, 2005 ------------------------- The Rude Awakening PRESENTS: All anecdotal data point to a sharp rise in inflation, yet the Fed thinks consumer prices are under control. Smell the coffee, Greenspan, or even better, just buy some
--- Advertisement --- ------------------------- ROOFTOP INFLATION By Tom Dyson "As if the high prices and poor availability of business insurance, workers comp, health insurance, steel, copper, stainless and cement were not enough, now we may be faced with a potentially more dreaded enemy: inflation." We found the above quote on a website called roofingcontractor.com "It is one thing when you have to pay more for materials and supplies in your business," says the roofer, "but it gets downright personal when you get hit with rising prices for bread, eggs and milk." Here at the Rude Awakening, we've been pondering inflation too. We think inflation - or at least, the Fed's reaction to it - is the single most important influence on markets. The dollar, bonds, stocks, gold, commodities
they all move in related patterns. So figure out what the Fed is going to do (and say), and everything else falls into place. It's a sad state of affairs, we admit. But the fact is, the markets trust Greenspan. They trust him when he says inflation "remains well contained" and they trust the Fed to "fulfill its obligation to maintain price stability." This trust is still alive
we saw a good example of it yesterday. The minutes of the latest FOMC meeting were released. "Inflation would most likely continue to be contained," the summary said and the dollar sold off as traders focused on Greenspan's reaction rather than the data itself. Of course, your editors think they know better and we don't think Greenspan has control of inflation at all. And nor do we trust him to fight it should the need arise. In fact, we think it's the Fed's job to promote inflation
without letting anyone in on the secret. It's how they keep the economy growing without damaging faith in the currency. Just look at the facts: Let's start with raw materials. "There's never been a commodity boom like it," says the FT. Oil, gasoline and marine fuel have all made all-time highs recently. The IMF has spoken about a "permanent oil shock," Citigroup talked of a "super-cycle" in commodities and Goldman Sachs think oil may exceed $100 in a "super-spike." Aluminum and Zinc have hit their highest levels for many years in the past few weeks. Copper has doubled in the last two years and steel has risen 75%. Coffee and sugar are both up 50% on last year too. Everything from gold to selenium to coal have been on the move. Following these prices into secondary markets, we see shipping and freight rates have been pushed and shipyards around the world are fully booked for years. Ports can hardly keep up with all the activity. Makers of mining equipment and farming machinery are booming. The nylon used to make tents is rising at an annual pace above 8% says the Labor Department. Cement is near impossible to find and builders in South Florida are having a hard time filling contracts. Companies can either eat the costs or raise their prices. UPS has added a fuel surcharge on March 7. Carnival Cruises has done nothing so far, but anticipates a 23% increase in fuel costs this year. Paint maker, PPG Industries, announced price hikes on March 15. A spokesman told the Detroit Free Press that raw material costs had risen by $50 million in the first quarter alone. Whirlpool washing machines and Caterpillar tractors have both got more expensive as steel prices surge and even Con- Agra foods, which owns brands such as Armour Hotdogs, Butterball turkeys and Hebrew National lunch meats, has announced price hikes. Then last week we noticed the U.S. Postal Service asking for permission from Congress to raise the cost of first class postage by 2 cents. We explore this in further detail in today's Did You Notice, below
Now look at the message coming out of the Fed in the minutes of March's FOMC meeting, released yesterday
"Many participants stated that they expected total inflation to diminish and any rise in core consumer inflation to be limited. One source of upward pressure on inflation had been the rise in energy prices, and it seemed reasonable to expect that these prices would level out or even decline mildly, as built into futures prices. Unit labor costs were still being held down by moderate wage growth and rising productivity. Indeed, a few saw a distinct possibility of further positive productivity surprises, representing a downside risk to the inflation outlook." Are they stupid? Or, as we postulated earlier, they are trying desperately not to let anyone in on the secret. But the cat's getting restless in his bag. Even a couple of Greenspan's minions have spoken out recently, most notably William Poole. After the markets ramped up interest rate expectations following the March 22 FOMC statement, Poole said, "From my perspective, the market reaction to that statement made a lot of sense and reflected my own assessment of a changing inflation environment." But as we said earlier, none of this really matters directly to the markets. It's Greenspan's reaction that is so critical, and right now, from his comfy spot behind the curve, his reaction still seems to be "measured." But he's a hard man to read, and here at the Rude Awakening, we won't try to second-guess him. Best to wait on the sidelines for now, we think, and wait for "Printing Press" Bernanke to take his place. For only then will it be safe to start shorting the dollar again. [Ed. Note: If you think Greenspan's going to spring into action and crush inflation, you'd have to expect the dollar to rise. The EverBank Dollar Bull CD is a nice way to play it. Check out the mechanics here: EverBank http://www.everbank.com/main.asp?idpage=pro_wc_disc&referID=11694 --- Advertisement ---
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------------------------- Did You Notice
? By Tom Dyson As was brought to your attention in the text above, the U.S. Postal Service wants to increase stamp prices by two cents. We started thinking about historical postal rates and their application as a potential measure of inflation. After all, how much harder was it to deliver a one-ounce letter across the country in 1960 than it is today? If anything, with the help of computers and technology, and increased commercial air traffic, it should be both easier and cheaper. That being the case, and given the price of a postage stamp is based on the costs involved of shipping mail and not on the opinion of a government statistician, we'd expect postal rates to be a good proxy for general price inflation in the U.S. The chart below plots the stamp inflation against the CPI, using 1917 as the base for both series.  Given that mail delivery is probably more efficient now than it was in the past, if anything, we'd expect stamp price inflation to underestimate general price inflation. And as the chart shows, CPI-measured inflation lags well behind stamp price inflation. By a simple process of deduction, we'd conclude that general price inflation is much greater than the government statisticians would have us believe.
[Ed. Note: If you think the Fed will remain behind the curve, and Greenspan holds pat, you'd have to be betting on gold. For the inside track on junior gold mining stocks, Doug Casey is the best in the business. You can read more about his service here: Casey Research http://www.caseyresearch.com/crpmkt/crpSolo.php?id=17&ppref=RAK012WW040605 ------------------------- And the Markets
| Tuesday | Monday | This week | Year-to-Date | DOW | 10,508 | 10,461 | 47 | -2.6% | S&P | 1,188 | 1,181 | 7 | -2.0% | NASDAQ | 2,005 | 1,999 | 6 | -7.8% | 10-year Treasury | 4.36% | 4.48% | -0.12 | 0.14 | 30-year Treasury | 4.66% | 4.76% | -0.11 | -0.17 | Russell 2000 | 613 | 611 | 2 | -5.9% | Gold | $428.80 | $426.70 | $2.10 | -2.0% | Silver | $7.18 | $7.14 | $0.04 | 5.4% | CRB | 302.63 | 304.32 | -1.69 | 6.6% | WTI NYMEX CRUDE | $51.86 | $53.32 | -$1.46 | 19.4% | Yen (YEN/USD) | JPY 107.69 | JPY 108.30 | 0.61 | -5.0% | Dollar (USD/EUR) | $1.2920 | $1.2928 | 8 | 4.7% | Dollar (USD/GBP) | $1.8918 | $1.8849 | -69 | 1.4% |
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