Inflationary Signs Are Everywhere In The Commodities Market

 | Apr 30, 2021 09:58

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Commodities are inflation barometers
  • Metals, energy, agricultural commodities all point to the economic condition
  • The Fed and Treasury ignore the signs
  • Econometrics - An art, not a science
  • Manipulating data - Weekly money supply stats disappear

In August 2020, the US Federal Reserve made a not-so-subtle change to its inflation policy. The Fed changed its 2% inflation target rate to an “average” of 2%. The central bank is willing to tolerate inflation well above its previous target before increasing the short-term Fed Funds rate over the coming years.

The tidal wave of central bank liquidity and government stimulus to stabilize the economy in the wake of the global pandemic is highly inflationary. It increases the money supply and US national debt. The Fed is taking a leap of faith when it comes to inflation, assuming it will be able to stop the rising tide of an economic condition that erodes money’s purchasing power.

Over the past months, commodity prices have been rising. Raw material prices are a barometer of inflation. Measuring inflation is a subjective art rather than a science. Commodities tell us that it is already at levels that need to be addressed with monetary policy, but the central bank continues to be highly accommodative.

If the period from 2008 through 2011 is a model for the years following the 2020 pandemic, we could be in for far higher commodity prices over the coming years. After all, the level of monetary and fiscal stimulus has been much higher in 2020/2021 than in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis.

h2 Commodities are inflation barometers/h2

Commodities are the raw materials that companies and individuals use each day. They are the essentials that power lives and businesses, provide nutrition and critical ingredients in products, and provide shelter via the metals, minerals, and industrial requirements for construction and infrastructure building.

Inflation is an economic condition that occurs when prices for goods and services move higher, and money’s purchasing power declines. Since commodities are essential products, they are highly sensitive to inflationary pressures. Since March 2020, commodity prices are not only signaling that inflation is on the horizon, but it is present and rising.

h2 Metals, energy, agricultural commodities all point to the economic condition/h2

Copper is a leader in the industrial metals and raw material sector. In March 2020, as the risk-off selling caused by COVID-19 sent prices cascading lower, nearby COMEX copper futures fell to $2.0595 per pound, the lowest price since June 2016. Since then, the red metal’s price has more than doubled.