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January 10, 2015 at 10:09 pmHVAC repair
is the principal partner of Financial Analytics, LLC. Dr. Weigand has been a faculty member at Texas A&M University, the University of Colorado, and the University of South Florida. He is the author of over 45 scholarly articles and book chapters. His research has supported various innovations in the field of asset management, including Russell Investment’s CrossVol(TM) Volatility Indexes. He is also the author of Applied Equity Analysis and Portfolio Management, John Wiley and Sons, 2014. Dr. Weigand earned his Ph.D. in Financial Economics from the University of Arizona in 1993.
If it Walks Like Deflation and Talks Like Deflation . . .
Call me crazy, but there seems to be a lot of chatter devoted to convincing us that we’re not in a deflationary spiral. One of the main rationales behind QE was that quintupling the size of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet was necessary to engineer a “healthy” rate of inflation of at least 1-2%. Let’s see what the numbers tell us (everything below is non-seasonally adjusted). If we believe that the core Consumer Price Index (CPI ex-food and energy) is the correct measure of inflation, then we’re inflating:
On the other hand, if we believe that the Producer Price Index for Commodities is the correct measure, the trend may be changing from inflation to deflation:
And, if we prefer to examine at the prices of key agricultural and physical commodities directly, without “hedonic adjustments” by government bureaucrats . . .
. . . we see that oil, copper, soybeans, wheat and corn prices are all deflating, with average declines of -29% over the past 2 years.
Which is not to say that QE has been completely unsuccessful in creating some inflation:
If you’re not concerned, you’re either not paying attention — or you’re a money manager. Bill Gross may be a strange individual, but he’s got a pretty good track record — see Bloomberg’s coverage of Gross’s deflationary forecast and Rich Miller’s more recent outlook for Europe. I would recommend preparing for additional sudden volatility outbursts, at least as bad as what we experienced during October 2014’s short-lived “correction.”
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