Jonflyfish wrote:Looking across the wall of screens, it looks like the USD is about to spring a fairly sizable and surprising bounce against currencies and commodities, metals as well- DYOD
Cheers,
Jon
barrytrot wrote:Is it just me or did you look at this and think, "does the price of commodities drive war?" It seemed that the peak was always a big war!
barrytrot wrote:Is it just me or did you look at this and think, "does the price of commodities drive war?" It seemed that the peak was always a big war!
Jonflyfish wrote:In order to have real inflation, money supply must be expanded. Velocity of bank reserves must be in motion. I do not see that happening now, nor anytime in the near future. Any "money printing" has simply been shoring up the balance sheets at the banks, NOT lining the pockets of the commoner. Until that happens, you can kiss the "wheelbarrow full of paper for a loaf of bread" concept goodbye. It will happen later, not in the near future. Unless you feel otherwise, please send your wheelbarrow full of FRN's to me. I'll make you the best tasting bread you'll ever eat in return.
HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:In order to have real inflation, money supply must be expanded. Velocity of bank reserves must be in motion. I do not see that happening now, nor anytime in the near future. Any "money printing" has simply been shoring up the balance sheets at the banks, NOT lining the pockets of the commoner. Until that happens, you can kiss the "wheelbarrow full of paper for a loaf of bread" concept goodbye. It will happen later, not in the near future. Unless you feel otherwise, please send your wheelbarrow full of FRN's to me. I'll make you the best tasting bread you'll ever eat in return.
I like this! But alas, all my wheelbarrows are full of copper.. kind of hard on the dental work.
Treetop wrote:HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:In order to have real inflation, money supply must be expanded. Velocity of bank reserves must be in motion. I do not see that happening now, nor anytime in the near future. Any "money printing" has simply been shoring up the balance sheets at the banks, NOT lining the pockets of the commoner. Until that happens, you can kiss the "wheelbarrow full of paper for a loaf of bread" concept goodbye. It will happen later, not in the near future. Unless you feel otherwise, please send your wheelbarrow full of FRN's to me. I'll make you the best tasting bread you'll ever eat in return.
I like this! But alas, all my wheelbarrows are full of copper.. kind of hard on the dental work.
well if we get to the point of wheel barrows of paper for a loaf of bread, im guessing a fanny pack of copper should be good enough.
Jonflyfish wrote:In order to have real inflation, money supply must be expanded. Velocity of bank reserves must be in motion. I do not see that happening now, nor anytime in the near future. Any "money printing" has simply been shoring up the balance sheets at the banks, NOT lining the pockets of the commoner. ...
It will happen later, not in the near future. ...
Thogey wrote:. We also have to consider the inevitable, we die.
68Camaro wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:In order to have real inflation, money supply must be expanded. Velocity of bank reserves must be in motion. I do not see that happening now, nor anytime in the near future. Any "money printing" has simply been shoring up the balance sheets at the banks, NOT lining the pockets of the commoner. ...
It will happen later, not in the near future. ...
This is true. Later... How much later, is the question. And what is your definition of near future? If you mean next week, or next month, then ok - nothing major is likely to happen in that time. But near future to me includes this year, and next, and the next. If the money is in the system it will affect prices eventually. I don't think anyone can predict the actual time lag, but it's already starting. I'm already paying significantly more for food both at the grocery store as well as restaurants (which are printing new menus, with new prices). (Fuel is up, of course - though pricing for oil includes other variables.) Cotton has doubled. Wheat has doubled and expected to go to 3x. Etc. At some point it all starts to compound. The increased fuel causes food to go up more. It may take another 6 months to really get rolling, and another year or two or three before full affect, but the damage is now done, and can't be stopped without inflicting pain that the policitians won't tolerate and the "people" won't understand. Even if we don't see "hyper" inflation, we've got a terrible road ahead of stagflation - declining economy with significant (double-digit) inflation, for multiple years.
HoardCopperByTheTon wrote:Jonflyfish wrote:In order to have real inflation, money supply must be expanded. Velocity of bank reserves must be in motion. I do not see that happening now, nor anytime in the near future. Any "money printing" has simply been shoring up the balance sheets at the banks, NOT lining the pockets of the commoner. Until that happens, you can kiss the "wheelbarrow full of paper for a loaf of bread" concept goodbye. It will happen later, not in the near future. Unless you feel otherwise, please send your wheelbarrow full of FRN's to me. I'll make you the best tasting bread you'll ever eat in return.
I like this! But alas, all my wheelbarrows are full of copper.. kind of hard on the dental work.
Jonflyfish wrote:Yes. Fuel up, food up. Neither at all time highs. You seem to be comparing price to recent lows. Gas has been higher (than it was after it crumbled from all time highs) but as we see today, the petroleum market is being driven more by geopolitical activities than REAL inflation (crude oil down nearly $4 as I write this...peace talks in the buzz, not fiat Purchasing Power Parity news). Wheat is higher than it has been, after it too fell from still higher prices than we see now. I understand the implications of some of these commodities rising from lows and selling from highs. Take a look at housing prices. The single most expensive budgetary item has already been set back to prices seen a decade ago. It is all relative. At any time you take a snapshot, prices for some goods can be up while others down. I maintain that REAL inflation actually takes place during an economic recovery when the reserves are multiplied and expanded in the fiat velocity machine. Look back to the late 70's and early 80's. Buying a house for $30k was a lot and few people made $100k+. A few short years later home prices were multiples higher, just like incomes.
Account balance increases by the Fed and digitally inserted to a bank's reserve by itself does not cause inflation. All else being equal, there has to be more fiat in circulation chasing the same goods. Currently, there is actually LESS supply of fiat- Just ask the 20% of the US population that can't scrape up more than a few food stamps if they are living with more or less money than a few years ago when McMansions were given away by the banks to anyone who could legally buy a house then turn around and cash out enough to buy a stable full of fine European imported performance cars. No wonder Gov't Motors went broke. Who wanted a Chevy Cavalier (The car you knew America could build) when you could sign and drive off in a new Bentley Continental GTC? Try doing that today.
68Camaro wrote:Wow. What can I say... If you really beleive this stuff, then we'll just have to agree to disagree, as I'm sure nothing I would say would convince you otherwise.Jonflyfish wrote:Yes. Fuel up, food up. Neither at all time highs. You seem to be comparing price to recent lows. Gas has been higher (than it was after it crumbled from all time highs) but as we see today, the petroleum market is being driven more by geopolitical activities than REAL inflation (crude oil down nearly $4 as I write this...peace talks in the buzz, not fiat Purchasing Power Parity news). Wheat is higher than it has been, after it too fell from still higher prices than we see now. I understand the implications of some of these commodities rising from lows and selling from highs. Take a look at housing prices. The single most expensive budgetary item has already been set back to prices seen a decade ago. It is all relative. At any time you take a snapshot, prices for some goods can be up while others down. I maintain that REAL inflation actually takes place during an economic recovery when the reserves are multiplied and expanded in the fiat velocity machine. Look back to the late 70's and early 80's. Buying a house for $30k was a lot and few people made $100k+. A few short years later home prices were multiples higher, just like incomes.
Account balance increases by the Fed and digitally inserted to a bank's reserve by itself does not cause inflation. All else being equal, there has to be more fiat in circulation chasing the same goods. Currently, there is actually LESS supply of fiat- Just ask the 20% of the US population that can't scrape up more than a few food stamps if they are living with more or less money than a few years ago when McMansions were given away by the banks to anyone who could legally buy a house then turn around and cash out enough to buy a stable full of fine European imported performance cars. No wonder Gov't Motors went broke. Who wanted a Chevy Cavalier (The car you knew America could build) when you could sign and drive off in a new Bentley Continental GTC? Try doing that today.
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