How do You Spell Stagflation? by John Mauldin | |
But first, an observation about a milestone passed last week. I started this letter 7 years ago with about 2,000 names and it has grown to where it is sent to more than 1,000,000 of my closest friends each week. For the last year, this letter has been translated each week into Chinese and posted on a Chinese version of Thoughts from the Frontline web site by my Chinese assistant Coryne Wei. It is likely to look worse in the coming months, at least in the statistics. To see why, let's go the table below from the Bureau of Labor Statistics who creates the CPI. The monthly numbers are the index for inflation. Since the base is from 1982-84, we can see that sometime last year prices doubled over the last 25 years. But it certainly feels like it has been more. We will look at how those numbers are created in a minute, and whether we can attach much credulity to them. "The current stance of monetary policy should help the economy get through the rough patch during the next year, with growth then likely to return to its longer-run sustainable rate,"Kroszner said. Data consistent with such growth "would not, by themselves, suggest to me that the current stance of monetary policy is inappropriate." The risks are roughly balanced between inflation and growth in his opinion. However, futures prices still suggest that the market expects an 84% chance of a rate cut at the December 11 meeting. Cooking the Inflation Books Just for the record, I want to state that I know as does nearly everyone else who pays attention to the CPI statistics that they are bogus. They do not reflect the real world that you and I, gentle reader, live in. So, while it may look like I take them at face value, I do so only because the Fed pays attention to the number, (nod, nod, wink, wink) and makes policy based upon it. So, let's look at how the calculation of the CPI has been politicized and how much of a difference it makes, and then go on to the expectation for statistical inflation in the near future.John Williams writes an excellent monthly letter on all types of government statistics called the Shadow Government Statistics at www.shadowstats.com. One of the things he points out that during the Clinton administration, the way the BLS calculates inflation was changed. He calculates his own inflation number using the old pre-Clinton inflation model. Using that methodology suggests that inflation is at 7%. And if you use other methods, inflation might even be substantially higher. Look at the chart below.
Then to confuse the process even more, the BLS uses something called hedonics, from the root word hedonism. Essentially, the adjust the price of an item based on the "pleasure" or increased value you get. Thus, they don't price automobiles based on the sticker price, but on what you get for your money. If the manufacturers load in more items like new electronics or anti-locking brakes that were not standard the year before that means you are getting more value for your dollar, so therefore the price in terms of inflation goes down even though you may be paying the same or even more to get out of the car show room. But the way we calculate the CPI is not going to change. No administration will want to go back and add in an extra 4-5% a year to Social Security and other government pension programs. So, let's return to the prospects for a rise in the CPI in the near future, which will have policy implications for the Fed. Gaming the Producer Price Index On Wednesday, we got the Producer Price Index. After the above notes on the CPI, it will probably not come as a surprise that there may be some problems with the PPI. The PPI rather oddly has the price of energy going down in October. PPI is important, as it is in indication of the trend of inflation in consumer prices in the future. As friend Bill King notes:
That means that inflation in the PPI numbers may be less than the table below, which is bad enough. Notice the increase in the change of year over year inflation in the index over the last 8 months. Another table shows "core" PPI, without energy and food, and you find that core PPI is flat. Again, we are seeing almost all of the real inflation in food and energy. But with a falling dollar, do we expect food and energy prices in the US to fall as well, since much of the price of food and energy is determined on international markets? Consumer Spending is Up, but then Again, It May Be Down Headline consumer spending came in up 5.2% year over year, which suggest a very respectable growing economy. But retail sales were only up 0.2% in October, which is below inflation. In other words, retail sales fell in October in real terms. But digging deeper into the numbers, we find a problem. Remember food and energy. As Greg Weldon points out, it is unlikely that US consumers bought 16% more gasoline than they did last year. The increase in spending for gasoline was all related to price. Ditto for food. FedEx warned today that its earnings would be down due to fewer shipments and higher energy costs. The number of containers coming into the US is down. Retailers are expecting a very modest Christmas season. So, we come to the question: Is the economy slowing and thus the Fed will cut, or is inflation rising which will force the Fed to sit tight? A Two Dimensional Problem I recently spent some time with the very brilliant Columbia Professor Graciella Chichilnisky (the economist whose work created the carbon credit markets, among other things). We got to talking about the problems the Fed is facing, and she gave me a very interesting insight from a paper she had written a few years back. I am going to try and re-create it, though I am sure I will take some of the potency away in trying to put it in my simple terms. Assume that you have an individual living in a two dimensional world. For them there is only length and width, but no height. Then let's draw a line between two exactly opposite points above and below that two dimensional world and connect them with a line. At the precise point where the lines meet in the two dimensional world, to the individual in that world, it appears that both points are exactly the same. Two things which would clearly be opposite to anyone living in a three dimensional world would be equal in a two dimensional world. The Fed faces a problem something like that. They are living in a two dimensional world, working with two dimensional tools (they can cut rates or raise them) but the problems they face are multi-dimensional. If they cut rates, the dollar will fall and import prices rise, and it will also likely have negative effects on food and energy prices. If they do not cut rates, the markets will simply throw up as it will interpret that as a Fed which is not concerned about a slowing economy. Not cutting rates risks an economy that could easily slip into recession due to a growing risk of a credit crisis turning into a credit crunch. Usually, that means that inflation will fall. Usually, but not always. The Fed is faced with a problem I predicted four years ago in this letter and in Bull's Eye Investing, as the Fed dramatically eased monetary conditions in an effort to fight deflation. In a word, stagflation. That terrible moment in time when an economy slows (is stagnant) yet inflation is high, limiting the monetary authority's ability to act. With a clearly slowing economy, a credit crisis, and rising inflation, they have no good and clear choices. Whatever they do is likely to create problems in a multi-dimensional real world. I still think they cut, as core inflation is still close to their comfort zone. But if core inflation starts to rise, they will have to act. Or at least should. Saudi Justice I usually avoid controversial matters, other than economics and finance, but I came across a story which I think deserves attention. It seems that a 19 year old young lady in Saudi Arabia was gang-raped by six armed men. They got between one and five years in prison. Because she was in a car with a man who was not related to her, she was given a sentence of 90 lashes. Because she appealed and a higher court ordered another trial, the court then more than doubled the sentence to 200 lashes. "A court source told the English-language Arab News that the judges had decided to punish the woman further for 'her attempt to aggravate and influence the judiciary through the media.'" Her lawyer had his credentials removed for defending her. This is simply barbaric. It is an affront to any civilized thoughtful person. Where are the protests? Are we to believe that the Saudi royalty condones such acts? I hope that other writers will use this in their letters. New York, Toronto, Europe and Thanksgiving This week I had to take a quick one day trip to Toronto. Changing my ticket ended up costing me six times the original round trip ticket. To add insult to injury, I got in a taxi at the Toronto Airport. It used to cost about $50 Canadian dollars to get a ride to downtown. The price has risen to $60 and then throw in a $10 tip. A few years ago, this would cost me about US$35. Today it was $70. I offered the taxi driver 3 twenty dollars bills and a tip, but he pointed out that the exchange rate made my US$60 only worth about Canadian $55. Sigh. I am going to have to go to New York again in a few weeks to attend the Minyanville BBQ picnic and charity fundraiser. South African business partner Prieur du Plessis will be there, but I am going because his wife Isabel has demanded my attendance. And a European trip late in January is shaping up. | |
November 18, 2007
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