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Inflationist or deflationist?

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    Inflationist or deflationist?

    Which one do you subscribe to? I want to believe it will be an inflationary market, but fear it will be a deflationary one as there just won't be money around for the common person.

    Thoughts?

    #2
    Gold buffs say inflation, buy gold. It looks to me
    that we can have a very unhealthy mix of inflation
    and deflation. in US with oil-induced price
    increases and no industry growth to support the
    job market they are seeing a real reduction
    in standard of living.

    Savers are getting slaughtered and borrowers are
    being rewarded. Where is this taking us? They
    gave away and are still giving away houses like
    popcaorn in Las Vegas. Now many new housing
    areas are littered with flat-tired cars and broken
    tvs on the sidewalks. No one will spend their own
    money to buy in those areas. This cheap money
    policy will end up ruinong and diminishing value.

    Comment


      #3
      Gold buffs say inflation, buy gold. It looks to me
      that we can have a very unhealthy mix of inflation
      and deflation. in US with oil-induced price
      increases and no industry growth to support the
      job market they are seeing a real reduction
      in standard of living.

      Savers are getting slaughtered and borrowers are
      being rewarded. Where is this taking us? They
      gave away and are still giving away houses like
      popcaorn in Las Vegas. Now many new housing
      areas are littered with flat-tired cars and broken
      tvs on the sidewalks. No one will spend their own
      money to buy in those areas. This cheap money
      policy will end up ruinong and diminishing value.

      Comment


        #4
        Gold bugs have been dead right for the past ten
        years.

        Inflation takes place when the economy is in the
        toilet.

        Deflation in a few asset bubbles does not mean
        deflation overall.

        The "debt" and "de-leveraging" concepts are
        important to understand.

        It can be dealt with by default or inflation,which is a
        type of default.

        If the voting public of the western world votes for a
        dramatically lower standard of living,no health
        care,no armed forces,no social security,no minimum
        wage,no education,no welfare,etc,etc,etc....then count
        me in on the deflation side.

        I on the other hand like to stay in the real world,as a
        collective we will keep walking up to the all you can
        eat buffet,get fatter and fatter and more government
        dependant until we explode like that fat guy on that
        monty python sketch.

        Comment


          #5
          beg to differ . . . deflation will trump inflation in this economic environment.

          just wait until we witness a stock market sell-off and watch what happens to prices.

          there is way too much debt and easy credit. Also gold and silver prices could also plunge. This is contrary to a lot of internet garbage that is floating out there.

          Errol

          Comment


            #6
            I can't see the borrowing to support any level of inflation to continue. Hence i would agree, deflation.

            Comment


              #7
              I tend to agree with errol and WD. I keep somw
              precious metal and warrants, but fear that one
              day we will see 1981 again, kerfluie! This whole
              bubble is riding on cheap money.

              Wish I had a crystal ball.

              Comment


                #8
                The problem with precious metals right
                now is that it takes fear of inflation
                to ignite buying demand. Gold and silver
                are hedges against inflation, not
                deflation.

                Also, crude oil is at least $20 per
                barrel overvalued, maybe more. When that
                bubble bursts, corn and canola are in
                big trouble. U.S. corn could be a sub
                $5/bu market quickly. Canola may dive
                into a $9 to $10/bu range which is still
                considered high when looking at the big
                picture.

                Even bulletproof cattle could run for
                cover triggering some nasty feeding
                losses.

                These markets can tumble hard and fast
                if the right market ingredients converge
                I've seen it many times in my career and
                it will happen again. Commodities are
                clearly at deflationary risk in my mind.

                Errol

                Comment


                  #9
                  Deflation?what do you call 100 per barrel at a
                  time the world economy is struggling to grow?
                  Reflation is the way the central banks are going
                  to fix the sovereign debt issues. Imagine when
                  the average retail investor decides he/she is no
                  longer happy with 1.9% yield on the ten year and
                  starts moving back into risk assets.
                  Imagine when a country like japan has to reflate
                  or default on it's massive debt.people think the
                  only way for a nation to de-lever is to stop
                  borrowing. However they forget that default,and
                  reflation is also a form of de-levering. And that is
                  a lot more palatable to the
                  electorate.(Greece,Argentina,Portugal)

                  Comment


                    #10
                    You say oil is over valued by 20$.how did you
                    come up with that number?are you aware that in
                    oct demand for oil was the highest ever seen in a
                    one month time frame?

                    Comment


                      #11
                      You can thank Iran for $100 per barrel
                      oil. There is about a $20 per barrel
                      geopolitical war tension premium built
                      into crude right now.

                      Also, if crude goes to $130 per barrel
                      like Goldman Sachs is preaching, can you
                      imagine the global recession /
                      depression it will create. Simply the
                      world cannot tolerate higher oil prices
                      without risk of more risk if financial
                      collapse.

                      Errol

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Europe is in a recession. North America is hardly
                        growing with 8.5% unemployment in the US and
                        China is slowing. My point is that despite all this
                        commodities remain relatively strong.you argue
                        we can't sustain $130 oil in an environment
                        where the US economy can hardly grow at 2%.
                        imagine if it were back to 3.5% then what?
                        remember there is a lot more paper flowing
                        around now than the last time we were at a
                        normal growth rate.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Both sides are wrong on alternate days.

                          All that is happening are larger daily swings. Swings too high the message is "found an extra million ounces, lbs, kilos, tons, barrels, whatever is appropriate for the commodity. Swings too low the message is "weather related, natural disaster, political strife".

                          Nothing has change so long as you are getting your share of the injection of the new print. Sweat the details if you're not as you should be looking for a new occupation..

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Sure on a daily basis you can see the markets
                            move from risk off to risk on. Listen to newmonts
                            conference call and you will realize it costs a lot
                            more to find new gold than it used to. Same with
                            oil -70$ a barrel would make oilsand producers
                            pretty slow. Imagine if there was a massive out
                            flow from commodities ask yourself where that
                            money would go. I can't imagine people would
                            get to excited getting 50 basis points on ten year
                            treasuries.

                            Comment

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