``The gold standard makes the money's purchasing power independent of the changing, ambitions and doctrines of political parties and pressure groups. This is not a defect of the gold standard; it is its main excellence." - Ludwig von Mises, Human Action
Yet, global liquidity continues to impact the real economy.
Figure 4: Brad Setser Dollar Reserves versus US Current Account Deficit
To quote Brad Setser, ``The basic story of 2007 is that central banks were buying more of everything.” (highlight mine) The increase in emerging world’s share of global reserves, more purchases of euros, pounds and other currencies but importantly more dollar purchases which dwarfed all.
The point is that the massive surge of global forex reserves appears to flow into commodities or that the commodity spectrum has been functioning as the “lightning rod” in absorbing the flush of liquidity generated by global central banks.
Yet, all is not equal in the world of commodities. Hard assets have clearly outperformed the stock prices of companies engaged in them as shown in Figure 5.
Figure 5 US Global: Hard Assets versus Paper Assets
Eventually when the turmoil subsides we should expect a return to reality. ``The value of resources equities will eventually catch up to the underlying commodities, so we believe this divergence creates an excellent opportunity for investors to acquire natural resources stocks at bargain prices” wrote Evan Smith of the Global Resource Fund.
Once again, the commodity cycle is a long process shaped by repeated government’s attempt to control the marketplace. Such distortions eventually surface through the disequilibrium in the demand and supply equation which gets to be reflected in prices as seen today.
Earlier it had been manifested through rising oil and energy prices. Next, precious metals and industrial metals caught up. Today, it has spread to “food” or agricultural or soft commodities. Will a US Dollar Crisis be next?
This also means that all attempts to restrict trade will ensure an extended crisis. With marginal global reserves at the lowest level since 1976 and where several countries are reportedly joining the fray to secure grain supplies in Africa as
Thus any form of disruption (such as unexpected climate changes) could further exacerbate today’s shortages.
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