Inflation Is Getting Worse

Posted April 10, 2008 | 06:34 AM (EST)



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From the WSJ:

After several years of relative stability, a wave of rising prices is washing over the world economy.

It comes at a most inconvenient time. The Federal Reserve is sharply cutting U.S interest rates -- the opposite of the usual response to rising inflation -- to prevent the housing bust and credit crisis from causing a deep, prolonged recession. That's making the global response to inflation more complicated.

On Wednesday, the World Bank estimated global food prices have risen 83% over the past three years, threatening recent strides in poverty reduction. The IMF forecast consumer prices in emerging and developing countries will rise 7.4% this year, the most inflation since 2001 though still well below the double-digit levels of the recent past.

From the WSJ:

Federal energy officials expect oil to average $101 a barrel this year, a sharp upward revision from its earlier forecast that suggests prices will remain above $100 for some time.


But the U.S. Energy Information Administration expects American drivers, truckers and airlines to use less fuel this year as the economy softens. That could take some pressure off prices for gasoline and other fuels, and could keep the price of gasoline under a U.S. average of $4 a gallon.

Just months ago, $100-a-barrel oil seemed an aberration -- a price surge driven by speculators that would soon slip back to more reasonable levels. But the move by the agency -- usually a price bear that had predicted $87-a-barrel oil in January -- suggests $100 oil could be the new norm this year.The arm of the U.S. Energy Department also doesn't anticipate much relief next year, when it sees prices averaging $92.50 a barrel.

Crude oil for May delivery fell 59 cents a barrel, or 0.5%, to $108.50 Tuesday on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Oil hit a record high of $110.33 March 13.

Contrary to warnings from many analysts, the agency believes gasoline prices will remain below $4 a gallon in the U.S. during the height of the summer driving season. The government sees gasoline prices peaking in June at $3.60, up from the national average of around $3.33 now. The U.S., consumer of nearly a quarter of the world's daily crude production, is expected to use 85,000 barrels a day less this year in liquid fuels than in 2007, the agency said.

No one really knows where prices will end up -- despite their best intentions and good faith efforts to try and figure it out. However, here is the basic issue with energy demand: so long as India and China are still growing at strong clips, expect more upside price pressure. Those two countries add 2 billion people to the demand side of the equation.

Let's look at some charts.

On the daily for oil, notice the following:

-- Prices were in an uptrend from early February to early March

-- Prices broke this trend, but have remained above the $100 level

-- Prices are consolidating above $100 level in either a triangle or rectangle formation

-- The 10 and 20 day SMAs are bunched together, indicating they are looking for direction.

-- Prices remain above the 50 SMA

On oil's weekly chart, notice the following:

-- Oil started a rally at the beginning of last year.

-- Throughout the course of that rally, oil has moved through resistance and then consolidated price gains.

-- It has used the 10 and 20 week SMA as support

Short version: oil's charts are incredibly strong and show no sign of reversing.

As a result, prices are the pump are noticeably higher.

As a result of high fuel prices, we're starting to see protests from truckers:

Tons of freight idled across the country Tuesday as independent truckers pulled their rigs off the road while others slowed to a crawl on major highways in a loosely organized protest of high fuel prices.


Using CB radios and trucking Web sites, some truckers called for a strike Tuesday to protest the high cost of diesel fuel, hoping the action might pressure President Bush to stabilize prices by using the nation's oil reserves.

"The gas prices are too high," said Lamont Newberne, a trucker from Wilmington, N.C., who along with 200 drivers protested at a New Jersey Turnpike service area. "We don't make enough money to pay our bills and take care of our family."

On the Turnpike, southbound rigs "as far as the eye can see" staged a short lunchtime protest by moving about 20 mph near Newark, jamming traffic on one of the nation's most heavily traveled highways, authorities said.

While we're looking at commodity prices, let's look at agricultural prices because they have also been spiking

On the daily chart, notice the following:

-- Price have broken through the support of an upward sloping trendline started in late November 2007

-- Prices are below the 50 day SMA and are heading lower

-- The 10 day 20 day SMAs are both headed lower and have moved through the 50 day SMA

-- Prices are consolidating below the 50 day SMA

-- Prices have continually moved through previously established resistance and consolidated those gains

-- Prices are still in a confirmed uptrend

The reason agricultural prices are so important is there are food riots in various countries across the globe and governments are curbing exports:

As well as the riots in Egypt, rising food costs have been blamed for violent unrest in Haiti, Ivory Coast, Cameroon, Mauritania, Mozambique and Senegal. Protests have also occurred in Uzbekistan, Yemen, Bolivia and Indonesia.


China, India, Pakistan, Cambodia and Vietnam have curbed rice exports to ensure there is enough for their own people.

Most commodities are priced in dollars. Therefore a dropping dollar is a de factor price increase.

On the daily chart, notice the following:

-- Prices consolidated in the 74 - 77 range from late November to late February.

-- Prices broke through support and have since fallen about 3.3%

-- Prices are consolidating in a triangle consolidation pattern

-- The 10 and 20 day SMAs are bunched together, indicating a lack of direction.

On the weekly chart, notice the following:

-- Prices have continually moved lower, falling through support

-- After falling through support, prices have consolidated their drop and then moved lower

-- The shorter SMAs are below the longer SMAs

-- Prices are below the SMAs

All of this leads to high inflation in the US:

 

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Olephart, bondad et al. There is a smell of fear in the air. And it is spreading around the Earth. The smell signals the end times of this most recent experment in world trade.
The next phase in international relations will be draconian tariffs, debt default, rearmament and the emergence of the East, centered in China, as the world's power and gyroscope.
In the meantime our banking system will thoroughly collapse as the Democrats reclaim political supermacy. Of necessity the American government will create a new nationally owned banking system and currency. The dollar will then be worth as much as the Continental Dollar of the 1780's Continental Congress.
Between now and then the swindlers and speculators will emerge with gigantic fortunes and will leave the Country in bankruptcy and choas. Then will be tested our competence and character as a people in dealing constructively with penury and destitution.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 04/13/2008

The oil companies are holding the American economy hostage with rising crude oil prices and alternatives that are only paid lip service by the Bush administration.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:10 AM on 04/13/2008

What this 2 billion people just appeared. Get a fricking grip.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:17 PM on 04/12/2008

All the middle class people I know think this is just another recession. But, my calculations put inflation to be about 5 %, 5 % per month. My ancient mother thinks depression but, during the depression of the 1930's prices came down. This is a very different world. We have been defeated ( sold out by our treasounous rulers) and we will have to pay war reparations to the victors in this treasonous route of our nation. The Bush family, Nancy Pelosi , John McCain and others have sold out America and should be tried for treason. The food banks are not able to sustain the people here in Michigan. We need to arrest and try for high treason the people responsible for the destruction of tens of millions of American lives. If all Americans with any influence what-so-ever are spineless, then I will burry My American flag deep in the dirt and hoist up the communist flag of China as our rulers would have us do.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 03:40 PM on 04/11/2008

This is not your father's inflation. This is not the wage price spiral of the Seventies. This is not a wage price spiral because wages aren't rising. Wages haven't been rinsing for 7 years and all of the increases in the earnings equation have been in the top 10%. Middle America has deluded itself these past years by inflating the "values" of their houses. I am still amazed at the cavalier statements equating home prices and spending. You don't spend your house! Those that have will now be bailed out by some vote buying political hucksters in Washington.

Prices are rising because we as a nation have attempted both Publicly and Privately borrow our way to success. We have spent our future and one of the installments on our debts is a debased currency. This requires that more of this fiat money be used to purchase a constant quantity of goods. The infusions of cash by the Fed to prop up the gangsters on Wall Street has been the underlying cause for the increased quantity of dollars required to be exchanged for the constant valued commodity, oil.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:23 PM on 04/10/2008

A different scenario has caused other commodities to require more dollars to purchase. China has been a net exporter of goods to the U.S. because of the inequitable Trade Legislation that was passed. They have in turn been a net importer of the excess dollars created by the debt taken on to purchase their goods. With the value of these dollars plummeting, they have been repatriating them by purchasing constant value commodities like sulfuric acid and grains. Thus the money that was borrowed to maintain our lifestyles in lieu of wages has returned to purchase our basic commodities.

As was predicted last year, the Fed and the Federal Government are both standing on the fiscal and monetary accelerators and the engine is slowing down. The engine is slowing down because the Republicans have gotten just what they wanted, a low wage, peon based economy with all of the benefits going to the top.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:26 PM on 04/10/2008

Dead on astute analysis, olephart!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:35 AM on 04/12/2008

Yup. All going according to plan. Look up Zeitgeist on Google Video to learn about that plan.

http://www.caeious.com/

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:47 PM on 04/10/2008

Hale, your India and China comment is something I have been asking here on Huffpo for months with no answers. My questions were; What happens when the Chinese and Indians get into a stage when they can afford automobiles? Who got then to this stage? (Hint, outsourcing). What will their cars burn and how will this affect the world fuel prices? Fasten your seatbelts, it's going to be a bumpy ride.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:35 PM on 04/10/2008

That's going to be a huge increase in gasoline/oil demand

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 PM on 04/10/2008

The mass production of enhanced Lithium Ion batteries (see nano wire technology) will make plug in Hybrids feasible and affordable. China has no fear of regulating its economy and will place suitable taxes on imported oil/gasoline to keep from bankrupting itself (unlike some countries). Countries with real leaders will find something better to do with oil than move fat asses around one at a time in 7000 pound SUVs.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:24 PM on 04/11/2008

The plan is to get people away from the notion of cash. The bankers want us to adopt their idea of debt as wealth. To that end, we were offered easy credit.

The truckers are righteous in their strikes. However, the North American Highway may put an end to the dreams of American truckers before the ten bucks a gallon gas will, when all of the ships are unloaded in Mexico and goods trucked all the way to Canada by Mexican drivers.

Right now we are in a situation where the various branches of our federal government have devolved into criminal cartels. A cartel of arms makers runs the Pentagon, a cartel of bankers runs the Federal Reserve, a cartel of drugmakers runs the FDA, gangsters run the Justice Department, foreign agents seem to run the intelligence agencies. It all amounts to a massive pyramid scheme, with the predictable end result that those at the bottom of the pyramid game are the losers.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:15 PM on 04/10/2008

Huffpost Pick for zizy!!!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:45 AM on 04/11/2008

Perfect description of the Bush administration.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:25 PM on 04/10/2008

Just another reason to become self crude reliant as we perfect the new energy means. Tapping into our own reserves and building more refineries is a common sense move which means it probably won't happen. We are into the blame, crybaby, backstabbing games that is the norm of DC.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:37 PM on 04/10/2008

Hmmm, contrary to your name, you prove to be completely an ignorant sheep. We don't have anywhere near enough oil no matter how many wilderness areas we rape and pillage. The whole domestic production idea is a big fat lie that the republicans are floating so they can justify huge subsibies to the oil companies even while they are making hundreds of billions in profits.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:24 AM on 04/11/2008

You greatly overestimate the extent of US oil reserves. We picked all the low hanging fruit decades ago. What's left is difficult to get at and expensive to extract.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:14 AM on 04/11/2008

Here's your sign! djthedj, before you post with the big people you might want to get your "facts" straight on the actual reserves avaliable to us if not blocked by the obvious loons like yourself. Lay off the koolaid, shut off the sesame street and take a nappie poo. This mantra and marching lockstep with the eco and party lines like cult followers helped get us into the mess were in now.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 PM on 04/11/2008

Okay so where's your facts? Show your work, this is the intertube after all. There's reams of data to make your point so make it.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 08:29 PM on 04/12/2008

According to the USGS there is potentially 16 billions barrels of oil in northern alaska along with billions more in the gulf and offshore pacific. These will never be realized until someone take the initiative to tap into these reserves. Of course, it won't matter if we cannot refine the oil. Blocking refineries from being built has been going on since the 70's and now we are paying the price for the shortsightedness and selfcenteredness of the econuts. It's ok to be good stewards but another to be fanatical loons.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 05:46 PM on 04/13/2008

All is going according to plan. One world government is only a few years away.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:43 AM on 04/10/2008

Missed ya, MrC.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 03:07 PM on 04/10/2008

Good to be back patriot, I missed you guys as well.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:48 AM on 04/11/2008

The Jersey Turnpike is not the most significant area to stage such a protest. Folks who drive there just take those kinds of delays in stride.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:08 AM on 04/10/2008

Hale, inflation or devaluation? Our current situation is nothing akin to the '70s oil supply shocks and wage increases that resulted in hyperinflation. What we are observing now is a direct result of the FED's short-term, short-sighted monetary policy: save the economy for the über wealthy while consumers "eat cake". The plan is painfully clear: socialism for the elite, capitalism for everyone else.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:58 AM on 04/10/2008

Isn't there some credible thought (you'd think this would imply evidence) that there is $30 worth of manipulated value in the price per barrell of oil? Is this really inflation?
Three years ago I paid $1 for a loaf of bread. Today I purchase that same loaf of bread for $1. Yet the price of wheat has tripled, what's up with that?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:59 AM on 04/10/2008

I wouldn't pay a buck for a three-year old loaf of bread.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:46 PM on 04/10/2008

Plus, Henry bought the same loaf twice. Wonder if he does that with gas, too.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 03:05 PM on 04/10/2008

Actually Henry rides a bike for most errands. It's liberating.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 PM on 04/10/2008

"Plus, Henry bought the same loaf twice."

Yes, but did he profit? At least he is shrewd and bought low both times.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:20 PM on 04/10/2008

He's a clever guy, he is.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:30 AM on 04/11/2008

ROFL!

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 PM on 04/10/2008

How about price freezes like in the 70's.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:29 AM on 04/10/2008

Yeah, and expect the same result. Not only does the government have the authority to tell private businesses what to charge for their products (you're thinking Soviet Union here), but if you cap price, then supply will vanish and you'll have long lines. Once price controls are instituted, it's time for a revolution.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:45 AM on 04/10/2008

As I remember, there were some wage/price freezes during the Nixon administration (hardly the Soviet Union).

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:16 AM on 04/11/2008

Rising commodity prices DO NOT cause inflation. Inflation causes rising commodity prices.

So your charts should be reversed. The falling dollar chart should come first, then the commodity charts.

The US Fed is printing too much money in order to sustain inflation in housing and stock markets. If the Fed still printed M3 money supply growth, you would see that the number of dollars in circulation is growing at a high double digit rate. This is causing commodities, which are priced in dollars, to rise (in dollars anyway).

Oil prices are not increasing because of demand in India and China. They are increasing primarily because the dollar is collapsing. The president of OPEC has said as much several times over the past month:

http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/03/06/business/06oil.php

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 07:37 AM on 04/10/2008

It is coming out now that the ' traders ' are driving up the cost of commodities, one of the last things the greedy a***** can manipulate for their quick profits after they have screwed everything else up. ( From a UN report. )

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:38 AM on 04/11/2008