Government Inflation Data at Odds with
Reality
By Gary Dorsch, Editor, Global Money Trends
In an age where governments of
every political stripe distort economic data to promote their own
self-interests, it’s hardly surprising that they present inflation statistics
that are wildly at odds with the reality faced by consumers and businesses, and
regarded with utter disbelief. In the latest US
government report on inflation for instance, there was a glaring “seasonal
adjustment,” for energy prices that cast great doubt as to the accuracy of the
findings.
US Labor Dept apparatchniks
said consumer prices rose a smaller than expected 0.2% in April, tamed by energy
prices, which were unchanged last month. Utilizing an obscure “seasonal
adjustment,” Labor figured that gasoline prices actually fell 2% in April, which
doesn’t reflect the reality of what consumers were paying at the pump.
Furthermore, the IMF’s global food price index rose
43% over the last 12-months, but the US
consumer price index for food is only 5.1% higher.
Wall Street cheered the tame
inflation rate, reckoning it gives the Federal Reserve more time to peg the fed
funds rate at 2%, to jig-up the stock market with massive money injections. But
the folks who aren’t fooled by the government’s propaganda on inflation are the
American people, whose dollars buy less with each passing month. The inflation
tax is the great thief of the middle class.
For the 12-months through April,
prices for US imports were 15.4% higher. Yet Wall Street economists massaged
the data, and explained that wholesalers and retailers are absorbing the higher
costs out of reluctance to increasing prices and driving away customers. Should
we trust the inflation statistics conjured-up by government apparatchniks,
or rather, place greater faith in the depreciating dollars and cents that flow
through the commodity markets each business-day?

According to the chart above,
unleaded gasoline futures traded on the Nymex ended
+12.2% higher in April, at $2.93 /gallon. The US Energy Information
Administration (EIA), said average retail gas prices
actually shot up 9.5% in April from March. Less than two weeks later, gasoline
futures advanced another 10% to a record $3.22 /gallon, and retail prices are
closing in on $4 /gallon nationwide.
On May 14th, upon
hearing Labor’s report of a scant 0.2% inflation rate during April, former Fed
chief Paul Volcker had doubts about the way the
government measures inflation. “It doesn’t feel quite right. I think the bias
clearly is more towards higher inflation, offset by the weakness of the
domestic economy,” he said. “Seasonal adjustments” are just one of the useful
tools that Labor apparatchniks have developed to
fudge inflation statistics. The Bernanke Fed has a
simpler model, it simply strips out food and energy costs, in its inflation
calculus.

Labor apparatchniks
said retail food
prices in April were +5.1% higher from a year ago. Yet, the Dow Jones
Agricultural Commodity Index, which measures a basket of corn, coffee, cotton,
soybeans, soybean oil, sugar, and wheat, was up 40% in April from a year
earlier. Major central banks have greatly increased the levels
of cash available to banks and brokers to stave off a credit crisis, and much
of the excess money has found its way into agricultural and energy futures.
Also driving up food prices is bio-fuel
production, which jumped 43% in the year through March. The American Farm
Bureau Federation calculates that bio-fuel use accounts for up to 30% of the
food price surge. About a third of the US corn crop, or 4-million
bushels, is expected to go to making ethanol this year. The White House’s chief
economist, Ed Lazear said rising energy costs account
for as much as 20% of rising food prices, while the sliding dollar accounts for
about 13% of this increase.
Other factors supporting higher
food prices are bad weather in traditionally big production areas, and tastes
in Asia that are shifting toward greater consumption of proteins from meat and
poultry which requires more grains to help produce.

Not included in US
inflation statistics is the Baltic Exchange’s Sea Freight Index, which monitors
the costs of shipping dry goods across 40 major trade routes for minerals,
grains, cement and sugar. Earlier today, the key gauge of global economic
activity jumped 4% to a record 11,067. Asian demand for grains and natural
resources has not been dented by the global banking crisis or the economic
recession in the United States.
Freight shipping costs on key export routes are 75% higher than a year ago, and
1100% higher than seven years ago.
Bernanke Fed versus Volcker View of Inflation
The Fed’s latest rate-cutting
spree, taking the fed funds rate to 2% from 5.25% last September, has opened up
the monetary floodgates, in order to jig-up the stock market, but also fueled a
global commodity boom unlike anything witnessed since the 1970’s. The weak US dollar
is contributing to yet another speculative binge, this time in commodities, led
by crude oil’s surge to $127 a barrel this week.
The
US M3 money supply is running +16.5% higher from a year ago, near its fastest
rate of expansion in history, and far above the growth rate of the US economy. That’s generating powerful inflationary
pressures that are far outstripping wage increases. But on February 25th,
a top Fed official Frederic Mishkin, defended the central bank’s prevailing focus on “core
inflation,” and stripping out food and energy costs, in order to keep the
printing presses rolling at full speed.
“Stabilizing
core inflation leads to better economic outcomes than stabilizing headline
inflation. If central banks raise rates aggressively to counter inflation
caused by a sudden rise in oil prices, unemployment will be markedly higher,” Mishkin warned. “The shock of energy price increases will
likely wear-off and have only a temporary impact on inflation. When inflation
expectations are well anchored, the central bank does not necessarily need to
raise interest rates aggressively to keep inflation under control following an
aggregate supply shock,” he argued.
But
on May 14th, former Fed chief Volcker strongly
disagreed, and warned the US economy could face a 1970’s-style period of
skyrocketing inflation, if consumers and investors lose confidence in the
buying-power of the US dollar. “If there is a real loss of confidence in the
dollar, then I think we are in trouble. That is something that has to be
watched. That has to be very much in the forefront of our thinking, without
that, we are back to the inflation of the 1970’s or worse.”

The Fed has already pumped half-a-trillion
dollars into the financial system in the form of open market operations and its
special emergency lending measures. Much of the excess cash in
the financial system has not yet shown up in the economy, because the banks are
afraid to lend the money. But once the credit crunch eases, the excess
liquidity could not only expand bigger bubbles in the commodity markets, but
also fuel hyper-inflation in the US
economy, if not drained out quickly.
“If inflation gets too high, the
economy will suffer dramatically,” warned Kansas City Fed chief Thomas Hoenig on May 6th, in unusually candid remarks.
“Rising price pressures are not temporary, as some assert, but are more
serious. These increases are beginning to generate an inflation psychology to
an extent that I have not seen since the 1970’s and early 1980’s. Energy, food
and other commodities have simply soared. If an inflationary psychology becomes
embedded, it will require significant monetary policy tightening to reduce it,”
he warned.
Yet soaring commodity inflation is
greatly at odds with historically low US Treasury yields, and it’s difficult to
understand why investors are still holding 10-year US Treasury notes, which could
be the next major bubble to burst. Aren’t strong price pressures in the
commodities markets getting noticed in the bond market, especially with oil
shooting north of $125 a barrel, retail gasoline costs at $4 a gallon and basic
food staples such as corn, soybeans, wheat and rice doubling in price?
China
and Japan
boosted their holdings of US Treasury securities by $18 billion in March, and
the Arab oil kingdoms added $25 billion, mostly through their brokers in London.
However, institutional investors worldwide have plowed $40 billion into
commodity index funds so far this year, lifting their bets to $200 billion. Retail
investors added $16 billion into commodity exchange-traded funds (ETFs) in the first four months of this year, and ahead of
last year’s pace of $15 billion.
The Dow Jones Commodity Index is
up 24.5%, and the Reuter’s CRB Index, with a greater energy weighting, is up
39% from a year ago, far outpacing the returns in US Treasuries, in an
environment of escalating inflation.

The Fed’s last two rate cuts equaling
100 basis points to 2% have back-fired, by lifting the commodities markets, especially
crude oil, while undermining the 10-year Treasury note market, which fell to a three-month
low this week, lifting its yield to as high as 3.98 percent. On April 15th,
NBER chief economist, Martin Feldstein, a top advisor to the Bernanke Fed, said surging commodity price inflation should
stop the US
central bank from cutting its overnight lending rate below 2 percent.
“It would make sense for the Fed
to stop cutting its target rate at between 2% and 2.25%, because to go lower
could exacerbate the problem of inflation emanating from high commodity
prices,” Feldstein said on CNBC television. There is now widespread speculation
that the Fed’s rate cutting spree has ended at 2%, but most likely, the central
bank will drag its heels on combating inflation, and move in slow-motion baby-steps,
when raising interest rates.
Seeking a quick fix to the slide
in US T-Notes, the US Treasury is banking on the doctored-up consumer price
index to contain the rise in 10-year yields at 4 percent. Yet efforts to keep
interest rates below the inflation rate, simply provides fertile ground for
commodity traders and operators in the stock market.
Japanese Bond Traders awaken from Grand
Illusion,
Japanese
bond traders have been brainwashed by government propaganda artists for more
than a decade, and programmed into believing that Japan, one of the world’s biggest importers of food and energy,
is immune to global inflation. But after reporting a decade of
deflation, Ministry of Finance apparatchniks are
finally forced to paint a rising inflation trend, after
crude oil prices doubled and a ton of Asian grown rice soared 120% from a year
ago.
Last month, Japanese consumer
inflation was reported at a decade-high of 1.2% in March, led by rising fuel,
raw materials and food prices. Ironically, the Bank of Japan’s super-low
interest rate of 0.50% encourages global traders to borrow funds in yen, in
order to bid-up commodities and stocks worldwide. Yet it’s tough to get the BoJ to shift to a tighter money policy, because the
Japanese government is addicted to low interest rates, saddled with a national
debt of $6.7 trillion.

Earlier this week, Japanese 10-year
government bond (JGB) yields surged 20 basis points to a seven-month high of
1.75%, while at the same time, the DJ Commodity Index jumped to a record high
at 22,600-yen. Two weeks ago, on April 25th the JGB market suffered
its biggest one-day JGB fall in five-years, as foreign investors sold a net
588-billion yen ($5.6 billion) of Japanese bonds, spooked by signs of inflation.
Tokyo
tried to hold down the cost of imported commodities, especially for base
metals, crude oil, and grains, by allowing the Japanese yen to rise against the
US dollar. A 13% rise in the yen helped to cap the year-over-year increase in
the Dow Jones Commodity Index to 10% in local currency terms. However, the yen
has begun to weaken again from its peak on March 17th, which is
allowing global inflationary pressures to sneak into the Japanese economy.
Will the Bank of Japan tighten
its monetary policy to strengthen the yen and cap the rise in commodity prices?
On May 12th, BoJ chief Masaaki Shirakawa said, no. “We need to bear in mind that real short-term
interest rates are around zero, a very low level. So if we are certain that the
Japanese economy will follow a growth path under stable prices, we will be
adjusting interest rates. However, we are now at the stage
where we need to pay utmost attention to the downside risks to the economy.”

The Bank of Japan has kept its
overnight loan rate pegged at an abnormally low 0.50% for the past 15-months. However,
since the Fed’s climactic rescue of Bear Stearns on March 17th,
yields on the US Treasury’s 2-year note have risen faster than comparable Japan
yields, climbing to +168 basis points today, from a low of +80 bp in mid-March, when the dollar fell to a 13-year low of
96-yen.
But soaring commodity and global
shipping costs, combined with a weaker yen, are now conspiring to ratchet up
inflation in the world’s second largest economy, which in turn, is starting to undermine
the Japanese bond market. At some point in the future, when the Nikkei-225
climbs out of danger’s way, the BoJ could eventually vote
for a baby-step 0.25% rate hike to 0.75% in the months ahead.
Global Commodity Boom rocks South Africa
As a major exporter of platinum,
gold, and coal, there is a chance that South
Africa might erase last year’s $5.5 billion
trade deficit, even as it grapples with soaring oil prices. Still, the South
African rand is roughly 15% lower against the US dollar, and the Dow Jones
Commodity Index is 40% higher from a year ago. On May 15th, South
African central bank (RBSA) chief central bank chief Tito Mboweni
pointed to soaring food and fuel prices as the main risks to inflation, and warned
that these pressures are spreading to other sectors throughout Africa’s largest
economy.
The targeted CPIX consumer
inflation gauge is far above the RBSA’s 3-6% target
range, hitting a five-year high of 10.1% in March. “Initially, these shocks
were confined to oil and food prices, but more recently electricity price increases
have compounded the problems,” the RBSA said. A 14.2% increase in the
electricity tariff approved in April, and the possibility of a weaker rand have
worsened the inflation outlook. State power utility Eskom,
struggling to meet rising demand for electricity, has already asked for another
53% rate hike.

The RBSA has lifted its repo rate by 450 basis points to 11.5% since June 2006, to
curb credit-driven consumer demand. “The MPC remains committed to bringing
inflation back to within the target range over a reasonable time horizon. From
time to time central banks will confront the problem of persistently stubborn
high inflation. The job of the central bank in that situation is to tighten
monetary conditions to try and bring inflation back to within the target range
as soon as possible. Whether a country pursues inflation targeting or not, any
central bank worth its salt would pursue low inflation,” Mboweni
said on May 15th.
Unlike the “Group of Seven”
central bankers, who hide behind distorted government inflation data, to keep
their interest rates low, South Africa’s central bank is beyond the “jawboning”
stage, and is actively tightening its monetary policy, to prevent further
weakness in the rand, and contain commodity inflation. The RBSA could certainly
use a helping hand from the G-7 central banks, in the form of tighter monetary
policies, to help control global inflation.
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