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Price inflation approaching

IMG Auteur
Publié le 07 août 2013
547 mots - Temps de lecture : 1 - 2 minutes
( 4 votes, 5/5 ) , 1 commentaire
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SUIVRE : K Street Wall Street
Rubrique : Or et Argent

There is some evidence in the UK of a pick-up in consumer spending, probably echoed elsewhere. There are two likely factors behind this, the first perhaps being seasonal, aided by the fine weather. The second is less obvious, but combines with the first to encourage purchases of big ticket items; and this is cheap consumer finance coupled with growing expectations of higher interest rates in the future.

Interest rate expectations are therefore fuelling demand for big-ticket items, such as autos and electronic goods, where the cost of credit has been cut to maintain sales. There also appears to be growing demand for fixed-rate mortgages, and thanks to banks willing to borrow short and lend long there are some very tempting refinancing deals available. In summary, low financing costs plus a decent summer is the basis for kick-starting economic optimism.

Economists are already revising their GDP growth expectations upwards. However, there is likely to be a growing tendency for prices to rise due to capacity constraints in companies that have bolstered their profits by withholding investment for the last three or four years. Consequently price rises will be greater than generally expected.

The situation in the US is similar, with an added factor. US consumers are more responsive to confidence in stock markets and property prices than in the UK, and here the news has been bullish. Interest rates are low, and they will rise, so buy those big-ticket items now. The cost of buying and financing the average house purchase has already risen an estimated 40%.

Governments and economists will think they have the recovery they have wished for. Unfortunately it will almost certainly be marred by price inflation greater than the increase in demand suggests. So while nominal GDP growth rates will turn out to be somewhat better than currently expected, the talk will be of temporary capacity constraints.

The end result is that while central banks will realise that price inflation is a growing problem they will be reluctant to use higher interest rates to choke off inflation. And if consumers see central banks are behind this curve, further consumer borrowing will be encouraged.

This leads into the second phase of inflation. The first was expansion of cash and deposit money and the second is its mobilisation. The price effect is likely to be dramatic as money shifts from Wall Street to Main Street (or in British terms, from the City of London to the high street). However, there is an additional currency effect which few economists factor in: markets begin to discount the future purchasing power of paper currencies, bringing anticipated and higher prices forward in time, while central banks appear to be reluctant to raise interest rates. The Volcker remedy of raising interest rates to choke off inflation is simply not a policy-maker’s option.

The central banks are bound to be more focused on the damage from rising bond yields to government deficits and bank balance sheets. They will also be acutely aware of the effect higher borrowing costs has on today’s high levels of consumer debt.

The conclusion is that the central banks’ inflationary response to the banking crisis five years ago is going to get considerably more difficult in the coming months as monetary inflation morphs into price inflation.

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Dear Alasdair,

I'm a great admirer of your work. However, there are a few points where I fear the gold bugs are mistaken (sacrilege to say it on this site perhaps!). I would very much like to be proved wrong with strong arguments.

First, the causes of the gold bull run since 2002. An article freely available on GMO's website ("Present and Emerging Risks to the Gold Trade", https://www.gmo.com/Europe/MyHome/default) makes the point that gold's appreciation has coincided with the rise of the Asian middle classes who are much more enthusiastic than the West about gold for cultural reasons etc. It has been less about money printing, or debt accumulation however irresponsible that has been. CitiFX recently drew some interesting charts showing the relationship between govt debt and the gold price and extrapolate to v high levels because debt is out of control. (http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2013-08-29/citi-asks-how-high-can-gold-ultimately-go) But correlation isn't causation. We all know that the statistics are made up and understate inflation, but it hasn't taken off yet in a way that would justify gold's rise. In fact TIPS implied inflation is dropping a lot. It therefore follows that if there is a major accident in emerging markets, demand coming from the rising middle class will eventually be staunched, impacting the gold price.

This effect might be countervailed in the short term by the Indian and Indonesian experiences which have led their inhabitants to seek out gold as a store of value as their currencies drop, profiting at the same time from the Central Bank April smashdown.

Second, the root causes of inflation. Another very interesting paper by James Montier also of GMO analyses the causes of hyperinflation, and makes the point that the MV=PQ relationship, ie quantitative theory of inflation, is too simple. Hyperinflations have more often arisen from supply side shocks like wars or collapses in key commodities that have notably affected the exchange rate. Money printing isn't the only game in town, and fiscal profligacy may only be part of the story. Until there is such a shock, hyperinflation is unlikely in US and UK, and in Japan (although this has become such an extreme case that the shock may come sooner rather than later). In the Eurozone, however, such a shock could take place if it falls apart and smaller countries might be tempted to allow inflation that would then get out of control. This may explain Germany's attempt to secure its gold.

Finally, emerging markets. If a collapse in emerging markets occurs, then an RMB devaluation becomes ever more likely. If that happens, it will set off a deflationary wave across the world as per the 1937 relapse. This argument is well summed up by Ambrose Evans-Pritchard of the Daily Telegraph:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/10272285/Emerging-market-rout-is-too-big-for-the-Fed-to-ignore.html

Evans-Pritchard also illuminates the Fed's incompetence in tapering, but reaches different conclusions to yours:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/ambroseevans_pritchard/10144451/Risk-of-1937-relapse-as-Fed-gives-up-fight-against-deflation.html

The question to me therefore is whether we can expect the following:

Short term - gold up
* “Technicals” looking good for gold, following the April coordinated paper dump, and with hedgies very short, although less so than a few weeks, lack of physical supply GOFO negative etc etc, points that you and many other commentators have made in the media recently.
* In the first instance, emerging market devaluations (espec RMB and INR) and gold becoming a flight to safety.

Medium term - gold down
* In the second instance, EM economic slumps and devaluations will curb purchasing power, hitting gold demand.
* EM reserves decline reducing a key potential demand source.
* Fed tapering incompetence leads to rising bond yields crushing the "recovery". Deflation ensues.

Long term - gold goes to the moon
* Inflating away government debts will become the modus operandi
* The Eurozone may break up, creating a massive supply shock.
* So eventually gold will shine becoming the true store of value.

But we might have to wait a while…

Any thoughts?

Regards
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Dear Alasdair, I'm a great admirer of your work. However, there are a few points where I fear the gold bugs are mistaken (sacrilege to say it on this site perhaps!). I would very much like to be proved wrong with strong arguments. First, the causes  Lire la suite
VoFaL'Americano - 03/09/2013 à 14:05 GMT
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