May 24, 2021

[This blog post is an excerpt from a TSI commentary that was published last week]

Senior policymakers at the Fed assert that the “inflation” surge of the past several months will prove to be transitory, and it isn’t hard to find market analysts and economists who agree with this assessment. A point we want to make today is that anyone who has been financially positioned for the deflation or “disinflation” that supposedly will follow the period of “transitory inflation” has missed a great opportunity encompassing an inflationary burst of historic magnitude.

In the above sentence we didn’t use the word “historic” lightly. As evidence we present three charts from Yardeni.com.

The first chart shows that the ISM Prices-Paid Indices for both Manufacturing and Services are at 10-year highs and are close to multi-decade highs.

The next chart shows that the percent of small businesses that are raising their average selling prices is the highest since 1981. In other words, this indicator of price increases is at a 40-year high!

The final chart shows the average of prices paid and the average of prices received as determined by the Fed’s regional business surveys. Both Prices Paid and Prices Received are at multi-decade highs, but notice that the Prices Paid line has risen to a much greater extent than the Prices Received line. This means that profit margins are being compressed by the inflation.

It’s perfectly fine to have an opinion about what will happen in the future, but it’s important to position your portfolio in a way that will enable you to profit from the overarching trends currently in progress. Since the second half of March last year and especially since early November of last year the three inter-related trends that have dominated the financial markets are rising inflation expectations, rising economic confidence and US$ weakness. The combination of these trends is very bullish for commodity prices, both in fiat currency terms and in gold terms.

There are warning signs that the above-mentioned trends are in their final phases, but they haven’t ended yet. Therefore, at the moment it’s reasonable to be positioned based on the assumption that what worked over the past six months will continue to work, albeit with a ‘nod’ to the likelihood that some of the dominant trends could be near their ends. From our perspective, that ‘nod’ has involved building up exposure to gold. However, when the evidence of a general trend shift becomes clearer it will be important to change with the times and not doggedly stick with the positioning that was aligned with previous conditions. In other words, don’t make the mistake that was made over the past 7-14 months by the perennial US$ and T-Bond bulls.

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