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    Originally posted by TASFarms View Post
    States might luck out. Don’t they have to start filling the federal reserve after October?
    Apparently the US are waiting to fill the strategic oil reserves until next spring…

    Cheers

    Comment


      errol at a Fed fund rate of approx 5-6%, the entire economy goes insolvent.

      In 6 months they will be starting QE again and we will have to live with the return of even higher inflation. 1970s type numbers.

      Inflation is a monetary phenomenon, always has been and the money printing is the culprit. Until budgets and printing are reigned in and taxes lowered to increase productivity, deflation not in the cards at all.

      Do you see any govts reigning in spending. The EU is in the process of bailing out numerous companies. Other govts are sending inflation cheques to citizens. Trudeau spent close to 20B just in the past few months. Biden has 3 or 4T under his belt in the past 2 yrs.

      Comment


        Originally posted by TOM4CWB View Post
        Apparently the US are waiting to fill the strategic oil reserves until next spring…

        Cheers
        Won't be Biden's problem.

        Comment


          Originally posted by shtferbrains View Post
          Won't be Biden's problem.
          Actually sad they still keep him in there
          Should be elderly abuse , he is completely out of his element now .

          Comment


            I tend to agree with Errol regarding deflationary pressures. The difficulty of these prognostications lie in when these shifts happen and the lack of a universally accepted metric or benchmark.

            My thesis and that of others is that this inflation is primarily driven by supply chain disruptions.

            Once these begin to correct, we should experience a price reduction to coincide with the decrease in demand.

            The rise in interest rates will reduce demand further, which will not occur in lock-step with the supply decreases.

            Cracks in the natural gas and oil charts show, which, if confirmed, will reduce energy costs.

            My fertilizer charts are showing signs of weakness that growers will enjoy if it plays out. There is hope...

            My grain charts look prime for further downside.

            Oilseeds also.

            Oil and soybean oil track each other remarkably well, so if Oil moves lower......

            What does that mean for soybeans?

            Robotics will allow manufacturing will continue to move to secure, low energy-cost, regions, think North America.

            Will that result in lower-cost goods?

            Maybe.

            Few understand inflation, with the common narrative of the causes and solutions too simplistic to be applicable.

            Comment


              Originally posted by wheatking16 View Post
              I tend to agree with Errol regarding deflationary pressures. The difficulty of these prognostications lie in when these shifts happen and the lack of a universally accepted metric or benchmark.

              My thesis and that of others is that this inflation is primarily driven by supply chain disruptions.

              Once these begin to correct, we should experience a price reduction to coincide with the decrease in demand.

              The rise in interest rates will reduce demand further, which will not occur in lock-step with the supply decreases.

              Cracks in the natural gas and oil charts show, which, if confirmed, will reduce energy costs.

              My fertilizer charts are showing signs of weakness that growers will enjoy if it plays out. There is hope...

              My grain charts look prime for further downside.

              Oilseeds also.

              Oil and soybean oil track each other remarkably well, so if Oil moves lower......

              What does that mean for soybeans?

              Robotics will allow manufacturing will continue to move to secure, low energy-cost, regions, think North America.

              Will that result in lower-cost goods?

              Maybe.

              Few understand inflation, with the common narrative of the causes and solutions too simplistic to be applicable.
              I agree Wheatking… unless Putin and Russia dive off the deep end into nuclear war… there is easily sufficient grain to supply demand for the upcoming year.

              I doubt that there is more than a 5% probably of catastrophic war… and it is unlikely that more than a 15% probably of disruptive grain distribution disruptions…

              Therefore with a broad global recession virtually assured 90%…. Localized energy shortages are partially being offset by currency realignments…

              The ‘new green deal’ decarbonization agenda may have been partially delayed yet remains intact to a large degree…

              AI and semiconductor agendas maintaining exponential growth of semiconductor distribution and integration remains unchallenged.

              Humanity is in general on track for civilization to charge into the increasing dehumanization by decarbonization and depopulation objectives UN, WEF, and Asian philosophy are intent on pursuing.

              It is Climate Week globally this week… happy decarbonization!

              Cheers

              Comment


                Originally posted by TOM4CWB View Post
                I agree Wheatking… unless Putin and Russia dive off the deep end into nuclear war… there is easily sufficient grain to supply demand for the upcoming year.

                I doubt that there is more than a 5% probably of catastrophic war… and it is unlikely that more than a 15% probably of disruptive grain distribution disruptions…

                Therefore with a broad global recession virtually assured 90%…. Localized energy shortages are partially being offset by currency realignments…

                The ‘new green deal’ decarbonization agenda may have been partially delayed yet remains intact to a large degree…

                AI and semiconductor agendas maintaining exponential growth of semiconductor distribution and integration remains unchallenged.

                Humanity is in general on track for civilization to charge into the increasing dehumanization by decarbonization and depopulation objectives UN, WEF, and Asian philosophy are intent on pursuing.

                It is Climate Week globally this week… happy decarbonization!

                Cheers
                Wishful thinking the Davos crowd already announced Agenda 2030 was to be expedited.
                I recommend reading this recent wef article on a 'Carbon' approach in which they admit Covid 19 was test in compliance. Pay attention to the buzzwords 'sustainibility' 'inclusitivity' 'My Carbon' 'Stakeholders'.

                "1. COVID-19 was the test of social responsibility – A huge number of unimaginable restrictions for public health were adopted by billions of citizens across the world. There were numerous examples globally of maintaining social distancing, wearing masks, mass vaccinations and acceptance of contact-tracing applications for public health, which demonstrated the core of individual social responsibility."



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                Comment


                  Originally posted by wheatking16 View Post

                  Robotics will allow manufacturing will continue to move to secure, low energy-cost, regions, think North America.

                  Will that result in lower-cost goods?

                  Maybe.
                  But first we have to get from a to b.
                  No doubt it is now cheaper (and will continue to be)to make a widget in North America using cheap North American energy, and automation.
                  And it won't take very much labor to operate the manufacturing facilities once they are built. But the infrastructure does not exist at this point , it will take a lot of Labor and inputs and energy to repatriate all of these industries. All of which are already in short supply, especially the skilled labor. And that will be very inflationary for many years to come, before we can reap the benefits which will inevitably be deflationary.
                  Unless of course we just completely crash the economy and credit markets by trying to fight the inevitable and absolutely necessary inflation which will accompany the reshoring of industries.

                  Comment


                    Sry got side tracked there. Inflation is the expansion of the money supply and a rising cpi is the symptom. The elephant in the room is the currency swap agreements being formed by the BRICS that 7 out 8 of the middle east oil producers have also signed onto. This is a massive geopolitical shift away from the petrodollar that has afforded the US fed the privilege to offload much of its inflation onto the rest of the world. No one nation could upend the mighty USD's reserve status, but when nations comprising over 50% of the world's population ditch the dollar they just might. Those dollars no longer needed in trade will come home to roost and as they do anything not bolted down will be up for grabs.
                    Last edited by biglentil; Sep 25, 2022, 06:11.

                    Comment


                      Originally posted by biglentil View Post
                      Sry got side tracked there. Inflation is the expansion of the money supply and a rising cpi is the symptom. The elephant in the room is the currency swap agreements being formed by the BRICS that 7 out 8 of the middle east oil producers have also signed onto. This is a massive geopolitical shift away from the petrodollar that has afforded the US to offload much of its inflation onto the rest of the world. No one nation could upend the mighty USD's reserve status, but when nations comprising over 50% of the world's population ditch the dollar they just might. Those dollars no longer needed in trade will come home to roost and as they do anything not bolted down will be up for grabs.
                      Very few understand this
                      Especially woke leftist leaders like Trudeau or his journalist deputy PM … as in zero clue
                      Last edited by furrowtickler; Sep 23, 2022, 16:34.

                      Comment


                        CAD closes at 73.57, seems that might add to inflation for everything imported???

                        Grains shooting up = food going up???

                        Comment


                          Originally posted by beaverdam View Post
                          CAD closes at 73.57, seems that might add to inflation for everything imported???

                          Grains shooting up = food going up???
                          We are still down tremendously from June highs

                          Comment

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