Best of the Week
Most Popular of the Week
1.Breakdown Of The Gold Market- Jim_Willie_CB
2.Silver's Spectacular Crash- Clive_Maund
3.Australian Housing Bubble About to Burst, Market About to Crash- Mike_Shedlock
4.Stocks Stealth Bull Market Trend Forecast For 2010- Nadeem_Walayat
5.Financial Markets Outlook 2010, When Hope Turns To Fear- Ty_Andros
6.Gulf Defensive Buildup In Advance of Attack on Iran?- STRATFOR
7.Global Insolvency, How will the U.S. Service its Debt? - Bob_Chapman
8.Higher Highs coming in Gold!- Peter_Degraaf
Weeks Analysis
Pension's Retirement Income Has Collapsed By More than 70%- 9th Feb 10
Will Copper Become the “New Gold?”- 9th Feb 10
The Inflation Mega-Trend Ebook, Economic and Financial Market Forecasts For 2010 and Beyond- 9th Feb 10
Gold and Economy Recoverygeddon- 9th Feb 10
German Bailout of Greece, PIIGS Would Herald Shift of E.U. Power To Germany- 9th Feb 10
Euro-Zone Debt Default Risk Crisis, "UR ALL PIGS FROM HELL!” - 9th Feb 10
FEAR DAVOS 2010, Into The Bomb Shelter- 9th Feb 10
Stock Market, Dollar and Commodity Charts of the Week- 9th Feb 10
Stock Market Former Support is Now Resistance - 9th Feb 10
Stock Market Funny Action Friday: What Happened?- 9th Feb 10 -
Sovereign Debt Default Risk and the Price of Crude Oil- 9th Feb 10
Stock Markets Time to Dance or Time to Drop- 8th Feb 10
2010 Global Economic Growth to Disappoint- 8th Feb 10
Gold Price Suffers From Lack of U.S. Money Supply Growth- 8th Feb 10
Stock Market Massive Head and Shoulders Bearish Price Pattern- 8th Feb 10
Stock Market Searches for Direction on Rudderless Monday- 8th Feb 10
Stocks Bear Market and Crash Bomb Damage Assessment for Key Asset Categories- 8th Feb 10
Electric Cars Materials and Resources Demand- 8th Feb 10
The Greatest Money War of All Time- 8th Feb 10
A Stern Reality Check for Gold Naysayers- 8th Feb 10
Greece and Portugal Debt Crisis, Euro An Anchor of Stability?- 8th Feb 10
Stock Market Wild Friday - 8th Feb 10
Stock Market Close to Finding a Short-term Bottom- 8th Feb 10
Austrian Business Cycle Theory and Global Financial Crisis- 8th Feb 10
Gold Investors Fateful House, $1000 The Buying Opportunity of the Decade?- 8th Feb 10
Stock Market S&P 500 Down Trend Cycle In Firm Force- 8th Feb 10
Gold to Benefit from Inevitable More Bailouts- 7th Feb 10
How to Trade IntraDay Gold and SP500 Stocks Index- 7th Feb 10
Gold and Stock Market SP500 Psychology: They Bail, We Buy- 7th Feb 10
Capitalism Reigns, Stocks Bull Market in Self-Delusion- 7th Feb 10 -
The Bull Bear Market Report Round Table on Stock Market and Commodities - 7th Feb 10
Financial Giants Overshadow Governments,The Reason Why the U.S. Is Not Regulating Wall Street- 7th Feb 10
U.S. Economy To Be Hit By Second Wave of Mortgage Defaults- 7th Feb 10
Gold, Stay Away Until the Dust Settles- 7th Feb 10
I Knew I Should Have Bought Gold- 7th Feb 10
Gold Crumbles in the Face of U.S. Dollar Strength- 7th Feb 10
Win-Win Scenario for the U.S. Dollar- 7th Feb 10
EURO March to Reserve Currency Status- 7th Feb 10 -G_Abraham
Stock Market Bottom Are We There Yet?- 7th Feb 10 -Guy_Lerner
Sovereign Debt Fears Signal New Stage of Global Financial Crisis- 7th Feb 10 -Barry Grey
Marc Faber Says High Inflation, Depression Then War- 6th Feb 10
Retirement Armageddon- 6th Feb 10
Financial Markets Review and Inflation Mega-trend Ebook Update - 6th Feb 10
Had the Fed Stopped Buying Stocks and Can we trust the U.S. Economic Statistics?- 6th Feb 10
E.U. Government Bonds are STILL the Safest Bet- 6th Feb 10
Financial Market Bubbles in Search of a Pin- 6th Feb 10
Solution To Greece Sovereign Debt Default Scare, Easy…Kick Them Out Of The E.U.- 6th Feb 10
Gold, Pension Plans, Insurance Companies & Retirement Programs (IRAs)- 6th Feb 10
The U.S. Dollar - 6th Feb 10
Turning Paper to Gold, 21st Century Alchemy- 6th Feb 10
Buying Opportunity for Gold and Silver, Precious Metals Senior and Junior Stocks?- 6th Feb 10
World in Chaos and Market Meltdowns, Too Costly To Bear - 5th Feb 10
Avoiding Wealth Confiscation... With Profit!- 5th Feb 10
Gold's Erstwhile Bull-Market Chums- 5th Feb 10
Vintage Wine Turns Sour for Financiers- 5th Feb 10
EUR/USD, What Moves You?- 5th Feb 10
HUI Gold Stocks Bullish Technicals- 5th Feb 10
No Easy Way Out From America's Debt Crisis- 5th Feb 10
Commodities CRB Index Bearish Key Reversal Month- 5th Feb 10
Is The Reflation Trade Over? Commodities Kiss of Death?- 5th Feb 10
Thursday Stock Market Shocker, Not a Normal Retest- 5th Feb 10
Foreigners Caused America’s Financial Crisis? A Closer Look- 5th Feb 10
Stocks, Gold and Commodity Markets Major Update- 5th Feb 10
Stock Market Manipulation and Gold Trading- 5th Feb 10
Emerging Markets' Growth and the Resources and Energy Boom- 5th Feb 10
Gold and the China Commodities Game Changing Action- 4th Feb 10
U.S. Weekly Unemployment Claims Jump, Hate Mail From Keynesian - 4th Feb 10
Stock & Commodity Markets Warning, January Barometer Points to Bear Markets- 4th Feb 10
Gold, Silver, the Dow, and S&P 500, People are Still Asking “What the Heck is Going On?” - 4th Feb 10
America Must Innovate or Die as China Scientists Lead the World in Research Growth- 4th Feb 10
The Corporate Takeover of U.S. Democracy- 4th Feb 10
Investors Get Energized With Energy ETFs for 2010- 4th Feb 10
Euro Downtrend To $1.32 Under Construction- 3rd Feb 10
America. What Went Wrong? (Part 1) - 3rd Feb 10
Breakdown Of The Gold Market- 3rd Feb 10
Retail Sales Discount Offers Are the Language of Action, Not a Trick - 3rd Feb 10
How Investors Can Profit From China's Economic Boom- 3rd Feb 10
Stock Market Warning Signs to Watch - 3rd Feb 10
Thoughts on Obama’s New Retirement Initiatives- 3rd Feb 10
Banking Sector Regulation, A Breath of Fresh Volker- 3rd Feb 10
Forex Forecasts for Nine Currency Pairs- 3rd Feb 10
Gold Price Bubble, Is George Soros Right or Wrong?- 3rd Feb 10
U.S. on the Brink of Bankruptcy?- 3rd Feb 10
Beyond Economic Stimulus, Fiscal Policy After the Great Recession- 3rd Feb 10
Global Insolvency, How will the U.S. Service its Debt? - 3rd Feb 10
Will the Inflationary Hurricane Blow Your Savings Away?- 3rd Feb 10
Stock Market Bottom, To Test or not to Test?- 3rd Feb 10
China’s Economy and Stock Market Leading Us Again… Downward- 3rd Feb 10
Silver Strong Long-term Bull Market, But Short-term Volatility- 3rd Feb 10
Gold Investing and Nincompoops- 3rd Feb 10
Australian Housing Bubble About to Burst, Market About to Crash- 3rd Feb 10
Greece Part of Unfolding Global Sovereign Debt Crisis 2010 - 3rd Feb 10
Financial Markets Outlook 2010, When Hope Turns To Fear- 2nd Feb 10
Stock Market Bulls and Bears Battle Lines Have Been Drawn- 2nd Feb 10
Risk Weighted Capital Adequacy: The Elephant In The Davos Jacuzzi- 2nd Feb 10
What’s Next for the U.S. Dollar?- 2nd Feb 10
Higher Highs coming in Gold!- 2nd Feb 10
Strategic Geopolitical and Economic Forecasts for 2010- 2nd Feb 10
Stocks Stealth Bull Market Trend Forecast For 2010- 2nd Feb 10
Crude Oil Close to Major Cycle Low- 2nd Feb 10
AIG Bailout Cover-up Inside Story- 2nd Feb 10
Gold Stocks Oversold- 2nd Feb 10
The Fed as Giant Fiat Currency Counterfeiter- 2nd Feb 10
Dangerous Recession Economic Recovery Lessons of 1937- 2nd Feb 10
Isle of Man, The Greatest Tax Haven? - 2nd Feb 10
Obama Threatens China and Iran, Another U.S. War?- 2nd Feb 10
U.S. Deepening Debt Crisis, Be Afraid of Bernanke Reappointment- 2nd Feb 10
Stock and Commodity Market Investors Groundhog Daze- 2nd Feb 10
American Grain Harvest Impact on Agri-Food Prices- 1st Feb 10
Technical Trading Charts for EWZ, UUP, SMH, BAC and WFC- 1st Feb 10
Gold and Silver the Next Rolling Bubble- 1st Feb 10
Are You 100% Sure They Saved the Financial System?- 1st Feb 10
The Collapse of Sovereign Government Bonds The Next Financial Crisis Contagion- 1st Feb 10
If China Sneezes, Wall Street Will Catch A Cold- 1st Feb 10
U.S. Dollar In Jeopardy Of Losing Its Value- 1st Feb 10
Secret Banking Cabal Conspiracy Theory Going Mainstream - 1st Feb 10
Obama’s Junk Economics, Democrats Relinquish the Populist Option to the Republicans- 1st Feb 10
Gold Bugs Short-term Pain But Long-term Gains- 1st Feb 10
Stock Market Trading System on 75% Buy Signal- 1st Feb 10

News Feeds
RSS Feeds

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

Most Popular 2009
1.Gld ETF Warning, Tungsten Filled Fake Gold Bars - Rob_Kirby ()
2.Depression 2009 The Largest Train Wreck in Economic History - Darryl_R_Schoon ()
3.Gold Price Forecast 2009 - Nadeem_Walayat ()
4.UK Housing Market Crash and Depression Forecast 2007 to 2012 - Nadeem_Walayat ()
5.UK CPI Inflation, RPI Deflation Forecast 2009 - Nadeem_Walayat ()
6.CAUTION: Stock Market Crash /Collapse Dead Ahead Say Faber, Rogers, Dent and Celente - Mac_Slavo ()
7.Emerging Giants Russia, China, Brazil and India Looming Collapse 2009 - Martin Weiss ()
8.Ten Major Threats Facing the U.S. Dollar in 2009 - Eric_deCarbonnel ()
9. Nouriel Roubini 2009 U.S. GDP Forecasting 40% Home Mortgage Failures? - Andrew_Butter ()
10.Baby Boomers- Your Generation's Crisis Has Arrived - James Quinn ()
11.Stock Market Crash 2009: Fine Tuning DJIA Target To 5,800 - Eric_Chevrette ()
12.US, UK, Eurozone Banks Face Collapse: Global Banking System Insolvent - Mike_Shedlock ()
13.Stealth Bull Market Follows Stocks Bear Market Bottom at Dow 6,470 - Nadeem_Walayat ()
14. .Hyperinflation Begining in China and Will Destroy the U.S. Dollar - Eric_deCarbonnel ()
15. Stock Market to Fall AT LEAST Another 40%! - Martin Weiss ()
16.Financial Crisis Worst is Yet to Come, Market Forecasts Into 2015 -Lorimer_Wilson ()
17. Fed Manipulating Market Prices, Gold, Oil and Bonds - Rob_Kirby ()
Most Popular 2008
1. The Great Depression 2008 - It can't happen to us....can it?”
2. The Battle for America Has Begun- Strategic Forecasts
3. UK House Prices Plunge Over the Cliff
4. US Banking System Teetering on the Brink of Collapse
5. US Economy Forecast 2008 - First Recession then Recovery
6. How Safe is My FDIC-Insured Bank Account?
7. Rising Risk of a Systemic Financial Meltdown:The 12 Steps to Financial Disaster By Nouriel Roubini
Most Popular 2007
1. US Housing Market Crash to result in the Second Great Depression
2. Operation FALCON - The USA is turning into a Police State
3. UK Housing Market Crash of 2007 - 2008 and Steps to Protect Your Wealth
4. US Housing Bubble Meltdown: "Is it too late to get out"?
5. Global Liquidity Crisis when the Credit Boom comes to an End
Most Popular 2006
1. Last Warning! Three-Pronged Collapse ... Stocks, Bonds and Real Estate
2. UK Interest Rate forecast for 2007 - Bank of England to do battle with inflation
3. UK Interest Rates Forecast to rise much higher due to rising Inflation and high Money Supply Growth
4. Emerging Markets outlook for 2007 - India, China, Russia, Eastern Europe and Brazil

Links

Money Forums
Certz
TradingTheCharts
Housing Market Forecasts
Local Issues


The Most Important Investment Report of 2010

Ending of Deflation Fears, Big Inflation Coming

Economics / Inflation Jun 05, 2009 - 12:07 PM

By: Zeal_LLC

Economics

Diamond Rated - Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleAt the height of the stock panic in late November, the flagship S&P 500 stock index had plunged 49% year-to-date.  Fully 2/3rds of this decline happened in the 9 weeks leading into the panic lows!  Naturally the psychological impact of such an epic selloff was utterly massive.  Fear exploded to unprecedented extremes.


A stock panic is a bubble in fear, and succumbing to this overwhelming fear leads to irrational selling near lows.  But interestingly at the time, investors failed to recognize this truth.  They sold aggressively, and they wrongly assumed their selling was rational.  Of course the only thing that would warrant a 38% loss in the stock markets in just over 2 months was a new depression.  So depression fears mushroomed.

With a depression comes deflation, so deflationary theories became widely accepted in December and January.  Yet there was one big problem.  Deflation is purely a monetary phenomenon.  If prices of anything are falling simply for their own intrinsic supply-and-demand reasons, and not as a consequence of monetary contraction, then it is not deflation.  In reality, the money supply was skyrocketing in the panic.

With the Fed ramping the US dollar supply far faster than the pool of goods and services on which to spend it, inflation was inevitable.  Relatively more dollars bidding on relatively fewer things means higher general prices, the formula is simple.  I wrote an essay on the big inflation coming in January, when deflation fears reigned supreme, using the Fed’s own data to highlight the staggering monetary growth.

Saying it was inflation that was coming, not deflation, was extraordinarily controversial just 5 months ago.  You would not believe the firestorm of flak I weathered for pointing out the threat of inflation.  Being contrarian never wins friends.  But not surprisingly, today the consensus view on money is shifting to an inflationary bias.  With a more receptive audience not blinded by fear, I thought I’d update this analysis.

Sadly inflation is woefully misunderstood in popular culture.  People tend to think it is simply “rising prices”, but this is incorrect.  The formal dictionary definition of this word is “a persistent, substantial rise in the general level of prices related to an increase in the volume of money and resulting in the loss of value of currency”.  The key is the rising prices have to be driven by an increasing money supply.

Consider an example.  If the Fed doubles the money supply and hence gasoline prices ultimately double, this is inflation.  More dollars are bidding on the same amount of gasoline, driving up its nominal price.  But if some calamity takes Saudi Arabia offline, and gasoline prices double, that has nothing to do with inflation.  Supply contracted sharply, demand remained constant, and hence prices rose.  These are two different scenarios leading to the same outcome, but only one is inflation.

And the reality is the prices of everything are derived from a complicated mix of the supply and demand of any particular item and the supply and demand of money itself.  So usually a given price increase has a commodity supply-and-demand-driven component as well as a separate money-driven component.  This is why it is notoriously hard to measure inflation and why average folks have a tough time understanding it.

Since separating out price effects is virtually impossible, it makes far more sense to look at the cause of inflation.  That is money supplies increasing at faster rates than the underlying economy.  If you think of price inflation as smoke, an effect, then why not look for the fire that creates it, the cause?  This fire is excessive monetary expansion.  When a fire initially flares brightly, there might not be smoke right away.  But there sure will be if it keeps burning!

Only a central bank can directly affect the base money supply.  Yes, commercial banks can expand credit through fractional-reserve banking, but credit is not money.  Credit is just access to someone else’s money.  If I offered you a $100k check as a gift, you’d be pretty excited.  If I offered you this same $100k as a loan, you wouldn’t be.  Money and credit are very different beasts, so don’t make the mistake of assuming credit contraction automatically means general deflation.

The place to look for coming inflation, the fire that is going to produce the smoke, is in the Fed’s own money-supply data.  I’ll start with a broad measure of the US money supply, money of zero maturity.  MZM is a liquid monetary measure that includes all currency, checking accounts, savings accounts, and money-market accounts redeemable on demand.  It does not include CDs and other time deposits.

This first chart graphs the raw MZM data in yellow along with the absolute annual growth rate of MZM in blue.  For reference, the year-over-year growth rate in the Consumer Price Index is also included.  While the CPI is horribly flawed for a variety of reasons, it remains the most widely accepted measure of inflation today.  But it ignores the cause, monetary growth, and tries to filter out effects, rising prices.

The Fed, or any central bank running a fiat currency not backed by gold, really only has one single power.  It can inflate.  Inflation, growing the money supply, is the Fed’s response to everything.  Sometimes it inflates more, sometimes less, but it is almost always inflating.  It is very rare to see money supplies contract, and even in these isolated cases it is only for a trivial amount over a very short period of time.

Back in the mid-2000s, MZM growth was stable near CPI growth.  In 2004 and 2005, YoY MZM growth averaged 3.1% while YoY CPI growth averaged 3.0%.  Also, note above that prior to mid-2006 the CPI direction generally mirrored that of MZM growth.  If MZM growth rates were increasing, so were the CPI’s.  And vice versa.  But in 2006, a couple major events sowed the seeds for the massive MZM/CPI disconnect we are seeing today.

In early 2006, Ben Bernanke took over the helm of the Fed.  An academic, he had a long record of being pro-inflation.  He believes the Great Depression happened because there wasn’t enough inflation, so if he was ever thrust into a crisis he would ramp the money supplies rapidly to try and avert it.  Late in 2006, the CPI’s calculation methodology was changed.  Rising prices would be more aggressively edited out of this index so “inflation” would remain at politically-acceptable levels for Washington.

Bernanke’s mettle was soon tested with the subprime mortgage crisis in early 2007, the general credit crunch in late 2007, and the global stock selloff in early 2008.  The Fed’s response was typical, it did the only thing it could do.  It rapidly increased the rates of monetary growth.  Stable at 4% when Bernanke took office, absolute annual MZM growth soon ballooned to 8%, 12%, even 16% in early 2008!  The Fed was flooding the system with new fiat dollars.

Thanks to the CPI’s methodology change, this surge in money was not being reflected in this index.  Yet choosing not to measure something properly does not mean it doesn’t exist.  The surging MZM growth was readily apparent in commodities prices.  The basic raw materials are the first prices to be driven higher by more money bidding on them, it takes time for these prices to flow through to the finished goods the CPI measures.  Of course commodities surged mightily in early 2008, partially as a result of this inflation.

Even though the Fed tried to rein in the MZM explosion of late 2007, it was soon confronted with the stock panic.  So it responded the only way it knows how to this new crisis, again it flooded the system with more dollars created out of thin air.  And as you can see above in the yellow line, even though the stock panic is long over the Fed hasn’t even attempted to withdraw any of this inflation.  MZM remains near record highs!

Since the beginning of 2008, absolute annual MZM growth on a weekly basis has averaged 12.9%!  This is a staggering expansion rate.  Remember the old Rule of 72 from college finance?  At this 13% compounded growth rate something will double in 5.6 years or so.  Indeed since Bernanke took over, MZM has ballooned by 40%.  This incredible deluge of money has to go somewhere.

Theoretically, if money-supply growth didn’t exceed underlying economic growth there wouldn’t be any inflation.  This is why the gold standard is such a brilliant solution to money.  The natural mining rate of gold almost never exceeds the natural growth rate in the global economy.  But of course the US economy hasn’t even come close to growing 40% since early 2006 when Bernanke came to power or at a 13% rate since early 2008.

In fact, per the US government’s own GDP data, since early 2006 the US economy has only grown 11.0%, a far cry from the 40.4% the Fed has grown MZM over this span.  And since early 2008, GDP is actually dead flat at 0.4% while MZM money has soared 16.8%.  In both cases the excesses are pure inflation, new dollars created out of thin air that are now chasing a relatively smaller pool of things.  Higher general prices are the inevitable result.

And boy, if you exist you know this!  Over the past several years, have your costs of living risen or fallen?  Is your food at grocery stores and restaurants getting cheaper or more expensive?  Are your utilities bills and insurance costs rising or falling?  Do you feel like you have more disposable income after necessary expenses or less?  We all see this relentless and very real inflation no matter what the government statisticians try to tell us.  The nominal cost for existence just keeps rising and rising thanks to the Fed.

Now if MZM has averaged 13% annual growth since early 2008, then why has the CPI gone negative?  There are a couple reasons.  First, the CPI is designed to intentionally lowball inflation.  Its custodians filter out rising prices and overweight the rare falling ones, like computers.  Washington wants a low CPI read because it reduces non-discretionary government expenditures on welfare programs indexed to the CPI.  This gives politicians more money for their pet projects.  Wall Street wants a low CPI read because high inflation is bad for the stock markets.

But the primary reason the CPI plummeted was due to the stock panic.  If you don’t remember how scared people were in late November and early December, go back and read the big newspapers from then at your local library.  Thanks to sensationalist mainstream-media coverage, average Americans really believed a new depression was upon them.  I’ve reported tons of hard stats on this in our subscription newsletters since the panic.  Americans radically reduced spending, hoarding cash for the worst case.

Remember that the prices of everything are a function of supply and demand.  As demand for goods plunged, desperate retailers cut prices to spur sales and clean out inventories.  It was this dynamic, a plunge in consumer demand, that drove the falling consumer prices the government emphasized.  General prices did not decline because money shrunk.  There never was any deflation despite the CPI!

If the raw money-supply data isn’t enough for you, consider the Continuous Commodity Index.  The CCI is an equally-weighted geometrically-averaged basket of 17 key commodities.  It bottomed in early December as the stock panic ended.  Since then, it has surged 31.3% higher.  Now there is no way global commodities demand grew by a third in just 6 months.  The rise since the panic was driven by a combination of investment demand as well as more dollars bidding on commodities, inflation.

If I ended this essay here, investors would have plenty of reasons to deploy capital in investments like commodities that thrive in inflationary times.  Our subscribers have already earned big gains in this sector since the panic.  But amazingly, this high sustained MZM growth is minor compared to the primary inflation threat.  Even though it is going to drive huge gains in my investments, this next chart really frightens me.

The narrowest measure of money supply is known as the monetary base, or M0 (zero).  M0 is simply currency (paper dollars and coins) in circulation, currency in bank vaults, and reserves commercial banks have on deposit with the Fed.  M0 is critical because it is the base of all money we use for daily transactions.  It is also the base from which fractional-reserve banking multiplies.  M0 growth has the most direct impact on inflation of all.  Its raw numbers are shown in red and its year-over-year growth rates in blue.

For 48 years prior to the stock panic, absolute annual M0 growth averaged 6.0%.  And this was within a tight range that seldom exceeded 10%, and even then only for short spells.  Why?  The Fed, at least before Bernanke, knew that excessive growth in the monetary base would rapidly lead to price inflation.  Growing M0 too fast is playing with fire, very dangerous.

The only notable event in M0 in a half century was the pre-Y2k ramp, a brief period of 15.8% growth ahead of the date rollover and all its big unknowns.  Yet Greenspan realized how dangerous this was, even for a crisis, so within a year M0 was actually shrinking a bit as he tried to soak up all that excess pre-Y2k liquidity.  Interestingly, some economists believe this Y2k M0 ramp helped drive the vertical final few months of the tech-stock bubble and that the subsequent rapid slowing in M0 growth accelerated its bust.

M0 growth was trending lower in 2008, averaging 1.2% in its first half.  This is one of the main reasons inflationary expectations were fairly low prior to the stock panic despite the record commodities prices last summer.  But then the stock panic erupted and the Fed panicked, getting swept away in the fear.  Bernanke decided to inflate far faster than has ever been witnessed in the Fed’s entire history since 1913.

In October, the scariest month of the panic when the S&P 500 plummeted 27% in less than 4 weeks, the Fed suddenly expanded the monetary base by $224b.  This was a 25% surge in a single month, just insane.  And it led M0 to rocket to its highest YoY growth rate ever by far, up 36.7%!  But the Fed was just getting started in its unprecedented inflationary campaign.

In November it grew M0 by another 27% over the prior month, yielding 73.0% YoY growth.  In December it again grew M0 by 15% MoM leading to a mind-boggling 98.9% YoY gain.  In 4 short months, the Fed had literally doubled the US monetary base!  Something like this has never even come close to happening before, so we are deep into uncharted inflation territory here.

By late December this information slowly started to leak out and contrarians who have studied monetary history were appalled.  Was the Fed mad?  Bernanke responded to these growing criticisms in Congressional testimonies, promising that the Fed would remove its “accommodation” (a euphemism for inflation) as soon as possible.  Even though the Fed has never shrunk the money supply noticeably, Wall Street curiously took Bernanke at his word.

So every month since the panic ended in mid-December, when the VXO fear gauge fell back out of panic territory, I’ve been watching M0.  In 3 of the 4 months since (May data isn’t out yet), the Fed has actually grown M0 further!  In January, February, March, and April, the absolute annual M0 growth rates weighed in at 106.0%, 88.5%, 97.9%, and 111.0%!  And in April alone M0 surged to a new all-time record high.  And by late April the stock markets had already rallied 29%, yet the Fed was still rapidly growing M0.

Friends, this data is flabbergasting!  How can the monetary base double in 4 months, and stay doubled for almost 6 now, and have no impact on real prices?  The monetary base is our transactional cash we use to buy everything.  Even checking accounts are directly tied to it, although the mechanism is beyond the scope of this essay.  The Fed has not only failed to start contracting M0 post-panic, but it is still growing it.

Nothing like this has ever happened before, not even in the 1970s during the last inflation scare.  So the inflationary impact of a doubling of narrow money in 4 months will certainly be serious.  Exacerbating this effect, as consumer spending recovers and bids on now-depleted inventories of consumer goods, prices will also be rising for pure supply-and-demand reasons.  This will be perceived as inflation by most people, so we’re probably facing a perfect storm of inflation.

As inflation really takes root in a way everyone can easily see, inflationary expectations will soar and investors will seek assets that thrive in inflationary times.  Of course this means commodities, primarily gold and silver.  At Zeal we’ve been deploying in ahead of this trend since the end of the panic.  Our trading results have already been awesome, but we haven’t seen anything yet compared to what will happen to our trades once inflationary expectations start scaring mainstream investors.

In our latest Zeal Intelligence monthly newsletter at the end of May, our 12 open stock trades had average unrealized gains of 37%.  Our 4 new long-term investments added in November near the panic lows had average unrealized gains of 103%.  Our 17 open stock trades in our Zeal Speculator weekly alert service had average unrealized gains of 53% as of the latest issue on June 2nd.  All these trades are elite commodities stocks that will thrive in inflationary times.  And thanks to the Fed, big inflation is coming.

Unfortunately most mainstream investors are still sitting on the sidelines in cash, too wounded from the panic to even think about stocks again.  But this ostrich approach will prove disastrous.  The kinds of inflation this M0 ramp portends will steamroll cash, rapidly eroding its purchasing power.  As mainstreamers realize this, the capital that will flood into commodities and their producers’ stocks should be breathtaking.  Subscribe today to get in the game and ride this unprecedented event higher with us!

The bottom line is the panic money-supply growth in the US has been very excessive, running at multiples of economic growth.  And in the case of narrow M0 money, the doubling in 4 months is literally unprecedented.  It scares me.  With so much new money in the system, and the Fed totally unwilling to undo this terrible inflation over the 6 months since, rapidly rising prices are inevitable.

We’re on the verge of the first inflation scare of the modern era, a time when epic panic buying into hard assets and their producers is increasingly likely.  Investors who ignore these dire tidings will probably get crushed by the inflation.  But investors who prudently study the dangers and deploy their capital to thrive in them will make fortunes.  Mark my words, the money-supply data shows big inflation is coming.

By Adam Hamilton, CPA

So how can you profit from this information? We publish an acclaimed monthly newsletter, Zeal Intelligence , that details exactly what we are doing in terms of actual stock and options trading based on all the lessons we have learned in our market research. Please consider joining us each month for tactical trading details and more in our premium Zeal Intelligence service at … www.zealllc.com/subscribe.htm

Questions for Adam? I would be more than happy to address them through my private consulting business. Please visit www.zealllc.com/adam.htm for more information.

Thoughts, comments, or flames? Fire away at zelotes@zealllc.com . Due to my staggering and perpetually increasing e-mail load, I regret that I am not able to respond to comments personally. I will read all messages though and really appreciate your feedback!

Copyright 2000 - 2009 Zeal Research ( www.ZealLLC.com )

Zeal_LLC Archive

© 2005-2010 http://www.MarketOracle.co.uk - The Market Oracle is a FREE Daily Financial Markets Analysis & Forecasting online publication.


Comments

stoneweapon
09 Jun 09, 17:23
Inflation

I don't buy the inflation story just yet and I am worried that too many wealth managers with people’s savings are acknowledging this inflation story, and investing/speculating accordingly to protect the erosion of savings, artificially driving up the price of commodities and stocks in light of weak fundamentals to support these price levels. This is causing an additional negative drag on the ability of the US consumer in particular to restructure his/her debts. Unfortunately, under the current global economic conditions there really is no safe haven with a better alternative than US Treasuries to park large foreign reserves - China realizes this crystal clear.

China is light years behind opening up free markets that are even remotely capable in reciprocating any sizable consumption to benefit US production and the US is heading down a dangerous social path itself. US production is restructuring, and relocating to be more competitive and US job losses continue at the rate of 600K monthly.

Where is the demand in the US economy going to come from to support sustainable inflation? The only recovery I see possible at the moment is for the trade surplus countries to continue supporting US Treasuries, allowing sufficient time to recapitalize and restructure. The biggest unknown is how much and at what speed will US consumption pull back in light of the inflationary forces that is currently driven by the velocity of the global savings glut instead of the demand for trade.

I also think it is in the best interest of countries holding US Treasuries to engineer and coordinate with the Fed, a suction of liquidity from the commodity and stock markets to shore up their US Treasuries when required to stabilize the USD.



Post Comment (Moderated)




(Note Commenting Issue: If after Submitting you are returned to the Main Index Page then due to site caching your comment has not been accepted. Solution - Click the Browser Back Button to the article page and Press PAGE REFRESH (you should see the message "You are not authorized to carry out this operation") Now re-enter your comment (ignoring the notice) - If all's well then you will remain on the article page after submitting, a moderator will check and authorise the comment. Alternatively EMAIL to comments @ marketoracle.co.uk , quoting the article number.

FREE Deflation Survival GuideFREE Updated 118 Page Independant Investor E-book