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Investors Betting On Inflation Are In Fantasyland

Published 12/18/2020, 05:12 AM
Updated 09/20/2023, 06:34 AM

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

The narrative suggesting that QE and money printing lead to massive inflation is a fairy tale. The same story was told nearly a decade ago and it simply never developed, leaving many investors very disappointed.

The Fed has gone out of its way to tell investors that the lack of inflation is the biggest threat it faces. What seems hard to understand then is why inflation-linked assets like Gold and Bitcoin are surging.

The Fairy Tale

The fairy tale started a decade ago when the Fed launched QE for the first time. The narrative that quickly began was that inflation would soon follow, and while some asset prices rose for a little bit, it did not last long. Nearly a decade later, even before the pandemic, the Fed was still searching for higher prices.

It means that today's investors are likely facing the same disappointment as they did over a decade ago. Gold prices began rising sharply in late 2008 from around $750, peaking in August 2011 at around $1,900. The metal proceeded to decline in value for the next 7 years, falling to as low as $1,000. It wasn't much different for copper, which surged from around $1.30 to almost $4.70. That metal also lost value over the same period.

Gold Price Weekly

Amazingly, we are again seeing prices of gold and copper soar along with other commodities. Now we have bitcoin, which has joined the fairy tale, as money printing from the Fed is sure to lead to the dollar's debasement and stoke inflation rates. But, one can easily see in the following charts that it is simply not true.

Where's The Inflation?

QE itself never promoted inflation following the great financial crisis. The trimmed mean PCE reading of inflation only passed 2% on a handful of occasions since 2009. We also know based on M2 and MZM velocity, too much money printing pushes inflation rates lower. A simple chart of M2 and MZM velocity, compared to 10-year rates, quickly demonstrates that.

Inflation Rate

The velocity of the money stock is a simple ratio of GDP divided by M2 or MZM. The faster those money quantities rise versus GDP, the slower the money spreads around because there isn't enough stuff being created to increase the demand, pushing prices higher. For example, in the early 1980s, $1 created in MZM created nearly $3.80 in GDP. Today, $1 created in MZM makes just $1 in GDP, disinflation at work. The biggest problem the economy may face is that GDP growth is simply too slow for the money being printed.

Velocity Of Money

Disappointment

All of the money being created by the Fed today sits in three places: the balance sheets of the banks, the US Treasury, and currency in circulation. Those three accounts hold $6.7 trillion of the Feds $7.2 trillion balance sheet. Therefore, it is impossible to create the inflation that so many are betting will happen, so long as the money remains in those accounts at the Fed.

Assets And Liabilities

The concept that all of the money printing today will result in a run-up in prices and produce massive inflation is nearly precisely identical to what happened in 2009 and 2010. The dynamics are likely to end the same way today as it did back then, with disappointed investors that latched on to the same fairy tale.

Latest comments

There was no global supply shock in 2008. Ask any business owner if there costs have increased, that is inflation due to a supply shock. Since the Fed's response to Covid, the rate of increase in housing prices has swung further faster than any time in history. That is inflation as clear as it can be. By your logic, since there wasn't inflation after the massive deflationary event in 2008, there never will be again.
tremendous US deflationary pressure is countering the highly inflationary behavior by the Fed. we're suffering from massive inflation internationally, but it's a slow trickle within the US. in other words, we're getting poorer as a nation but don't realize it until we look globally.
Read [Baratta - Gold Is a Better Way (2018)] to understand what's going on inside the economy.
Your dollars are worth less most days and commodities are up most days .
Don't listen to this guy he is out of common sense, and the basic economics mathimaticsI have posted earlier, actuallyBasically he said inflation caused by prices going higherNot because of prenting moneyAnd he doesn't know exactly what caused prices going higher
This is a lesson on the diminishing returns of government stimulus. If it worked historically every government would just print into huge debt and inflate their markets. Watch out for people peddling ideas expressed in this article.
Exactly. This guy has no idea what hes talking about. The dollar continuing its decline in value due to unchecked money printing is as sure as the sky is blue.
Commodity prices are inflated. Most importantly by far the markets are inflated. Worst ever recorded on Buffett Indicator as there is a complete disconnect between company earnings/BV/GDP and other value indicators with pricing.Our economy is an economic zombie. Living solely on cheap debt the flesh it will eat until the well dries up or worst.
Only goods Supply reduction creates inflation. All the Fed money went to stocks, bonds, real estate etc.
I find it interesting that the first round of qe for the pandemic was just over $1T, and the wealth of the richest increased by about $1T. Is it any wonder who ended up with all of the money from the first relief bill? Is there any question who will end up with all the money in the second relief bill?
When they printed money or created these virtual credits they thought money would circulate, but it did not, because everyone is at home. So, the main demand became virtual entertainment and virtual buy, but still economy needs people in the street and to circulate the many, because still people are more likely to spend when the see or wear or smell the real thing, so, inflation from all that money is put on hold. Production also slowed down but that will grow very fast once things go back to normal. That said, if investors are seing this they know groth stocks do not do well in high inflation, because people tend to spend more than invest. This will cause therefore a Growth Stock Sell off, from the big players on those stock which will cause stock market crash of 2020.
The Fed is not withdrawing the money supply but rather flooding the system with it to the tune of trillions of $$$. When the economy recovers and the velocity of money ramps up, then inflation will ramp up as well. Asset prices are not going up because people are afraid to spend due to COVID. Look at the buying power of the Dollar as compared to 10 years ago....20 years, etc. Never believe the government numbers.
This article is a psyop, housing prices up, food is up, services up, asset prices obviously, this author is out to lunch
Modern fiat currency and modern monetary policy is far different from the traditional models I used to study /teach in Mico and Macroeconomics. In the past, there was a definite connection between the supply of money and its relative value, that relationship has become increasingly less predictive. It actually has more to do with psychological effects than economics. Small price increases tell our brains that future demand is increasing, which spur business to expand. Price increases are the definition of inflation, not an increase to the money supply. Although inflation erodes buying power, we tend to like the belief of better demand in the future over a weaker currency. The only way that the current QE will create inflation is if enough people believe that the US treasury is unable to make good on its debt. While possible, that reality is too unlikely right now. In the heart of global economic crises, the Fed lowered interest rates to zero, only to see an increase in demand.
The Dollar has lost 94% of it's value in the last 100 years all the while confidence in the Treasury paying for bonds and making good on it's debt was fully in place, Also the Dollar was backed by gold & silver. Money is fully fiat now and is issued as debt. The Fed has inflation built into the system.
Are you following the latest PPI and CPI readings in industrial countries?
You failed basics I give you that.. By printing extra notes, a government increases the total amount of money in circulation. If that is not followed by an increase in production, there is more money to spend on the same amount of goods and services as before. Everything costs more, thus our money is worth less.That is what cause price to go higher, price go higher leads to inflation,,,As u said its increasing of pricesBut you have to ask your self what cause things to increase its price, morey paper printing
why compare current situation to last recession 10yr ago. not comparable!
This message is for Michael Kramer. regarding his above article. Please advise.
The thing is that inflation is not the only resson why people invest ğn gold silver or bitcoin, geopolitical risks, extremely overvalued stocks crashing dxy etc
Michael, seriously?! Did you look up the definition of inflation? Ill tell you, its the expansion of the money supply. Look at M2 M1. That is massive inflation. And by the way, have you seen industrial commodities? How is it you have a job writing this
This author/article has an America-centric lens. Do you think America is the only country engaging in QE?
there is no deflation, the fiat money are still being rendered worthless. it's just that the printed money never reach the hands of the many to consume.
banks are not lending the free money, they are just rebalancing debt with it... it will not lead to higher productivity or more goods produced
This time it is different because supply chains got so disrupted that supply will not match the demand causing inflation far more than Fed can handle. inflation is around the corner. be ready
I've never understood this argument. When the Fed has programs like QE they're increasing the amount of liquidity in the market. That money isn't going to things CPI tracks, it's going into stocks, bonds, gold, and now bitcoin. It creates higher demand which raises the value.
I've never understood this argument. When the Fed has programs like QE they're increasing the amount of liquidity in the market. That money isn't going to things CPI tracks, it's going into stocks, bonds, gold, and now bitcoin. It creates higher demand which raises the value.
I remember late 1970’s wich ended in Paul Volcker raising fed rate to 18% and I was 40 years old then; you don’t
Want to explain why institutional money is betting big on bitcoin then? have you been ignoring all the smart money pouring hundred of millions into bitcoin? You honestly believe with record unemployment and falling incomes that this won't contribute to a disastrous future where our money is worthless? Want to explain DXY crashing? What an article..
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