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Suddenly and without warning, price inflation — long ignored
and forever understated — has burst onto the American scene
with the force of a cat-5 hurricane.
The November jump in the U.S. Producer Price Index has
exceeded the largest single-month rises of the Bush 2000s
... the Clinton '90s ... the Reagan '80s ... and even the
Carter '70s.
It's the worst bout of wholesale price inflation since the
aftermath of the 1973 Arab oil embargo.
It's the equivalent of over 38% inflation per year — a
double-digit reading so high that not even the usual line-up
of statistics-manipulating bureaucrats or double-talking
politicians has dared come forward to spin the news.
And it is here. Now!
What's most remarkable, however, is the fact that, in the
past, there was always an excuse. This time, there's none.
In the past, whenever there was a surge in U.S. prices, it
could always be blamed on a geopolitical event, an
international cartel, or some other powerful force beyond
our government's control. This time, it cannot be.
Gasoline: Up a Shocking 34.8%!
Annualized Rate: Over 417%!
Consider the wholesale price of gasoline, for example.
In the month of November, it wasn't up 5% or even 10%,
either of which would have been shocking enough. Instead, it
surged by a record-shattering 34.8%!
And that's not an annualized pace of 100% or even 200%. It's
over 417%!
This is the first time in American history that prices have
surged so dramatically in the absence of a massive outside
force ...
Back in 1980, for example, the largest
one-month jump in the wholesale price of gasoline was in
February, when the Iranian hostage crisis was reaching a
crescendo and Iran was threatening to remove millions of
barrels of oil from the world market.
The image of Ayatollah Khomeini loomed large over Iranian
society and over the world's oil markets, with a force and
foreboding larger than George Orwell's Big Brother or
today's Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
How much did U.S. wholesale gas prices rise? Just 6.8%.
In 1990, a big gas price surge came in
August.
The obvious culprit: Saddam Hussein, who suddenly got the
bright of idea of invading neighboring oil-rich Kuwait,
plundering the country and setting afire thousands of the
nation's oil wells.
The hellish spectacle of the smoke-blackened desert — along
with the reality of massive supply destruction — naturally
drove up the price of gas. How much? 17.1%. Then ...
In 1999, the worst price surge came in
April. And again, U.S. authorities could point fingers at an
outside force: OPEC.
At their March meeting in Vienna, the world's largest oil
producers suddenly decided to cut production by two million
barrels — and to maintain that lower level of output for a
full year beginning in April.
The metaphor for this momentous decision came on March 23,
at exactly 4:26 PM Greenwich Mean Time.
That's when Kuwait Oil Minister Sheikh Saud Nasser Al-Sabah
stared into the press cameras, wiped his mustache, and
signaled OPEC's determination to make a major impact on
world oil markets.
The wholesale price for gasoline in the U.S. surged by
28.8%.
So What's the Excuse This Time?
Today, we have no sweeping new revolution in Iran ... no
sudden and unexpected invasion of an oil-rich country ... no
big production cuts by OPEC.
No. Today, what we have instead is precisely what we've been
warning you about week after week: The biggest bout of the
most shameless money-pumping we've seen in our lifetimes.
This time, the leading culprit is the U.S. Federal Reserve.
But he's not the only one. Following his lead in the
money-printing spree are also the central banks of Europe,
Japan, China and India ... and in their footsteps, the
central banks of emerging markets all around the world.
This time, the primary force behind the surge in energy
prices is the greatest, most flagrant violation of prudent
monetary policy of all time.
And this time, the image that looms over the world's markets
is not an ayatollah in Iran ... not burning oil fields in
Kuwait ... and not OPEC ministers in Vienna. It's the visage
of none other than Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.
Look again at the facts and you'll see why this is actually
the most frightening scenario of all:
February 1980: The Iran crisis drove U.S. wholesale gas
prices up by 6.8%.
August 1990: The Kuwait crisis drove gas prices up 17.1%.
April 1990: The OPEC crisis drove gas prices up 28.8%.
November 2007: The crisis created largely by the Federal
Reserve itself has just driven gas prices up by more than
all of the above: 34.8%!
The Proof of Reckless
Monetary Policy
How do we know that the Fed's monetary policy is so
reckless? In his Friday report, "Fed
Fumbling in the Dark; Investors Losing Confidence,"
Mike Larson provides the proof:
"Year over year, producer prices are up a hefty 7.2% — the
biggest jump since November 1981. The last time that
happened, 30-year Treasuries were yielding around 13% versus
about 4.6% now. ...
"The Fed has to take a stance. They can (A) target inflation
aggressively and do their best to slay the beast, economic
consequences be damned ... or (B) just admit they're trying
to reflate the housing and mortgage markets ... that they
don't care if that drives inflation higher in the short term
... and that they'll deal with prices later."
Indeed!
Back in 1981, the Fed was stepping
in aggressively to tighten money and pushed interest rates
up far higher than inflation.
Result: The difference between the 30-year T-bond yield and
producer price inflation was a robust 5.8%, paving
the way for two decades of stable prices.
But now, the Fed is doing
precisely the opposite:
It's pumping in so much money, it has artificially driven
interest rates down far lower than the true
inflation rate.
Result: The difference between the 30-year T-bond yield and
producer price inflation is a minus 2.6%, paving
the way for years of surging prices.
In his Thursday Money and Markets, "Fed
Feeding Food Inflation," Larry shows how this is
driving the price of wheat, corn, soybeans and other
commodities through the roof. And as Larry has stressed for
many moons, it's not just food. It's "every natural resource
under the sun."
That means surging prices ahead for gold, silver, energy,
construction materials, even water. It also means a wave of
inflation the likes of which has not been seen since the
1970s.
And it means a massive battle looming between:
> powerful
market forces driving interest rates higher and ...
> a Fed that's
desperate to push them down further.
For you, that translates into the most unique threat to your
financial well-being in at least three decades — and, at the
same time, the most unique wealth-building opportunities of
a lifetime.
Listen to
my audio posted on our website yesterday for my
thoughts on how unprecedented this is.
And stand by for our e-mails with more detailed instructions
on what to do next.
Good luck and God bless!
Martin
About Money and Markets
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