The price of commodities excluding crude oil is rising fast, now at their highest level in over 10 years - Chart 1.
Chart 1 - S&P GSCI ex-Crude Oil Capped Commodity Index
Even when excluding all energy commodities (ie natural gas, coal, etc) we still see that prices are rising very fast, now at 2013 highs - Chart 2.
Chart 2 - S&P GSCI Non Energy
There is no question in my mind that the driving force behind these price spikes is the flood of new dollars printed by the Fed and Treasury - Chart 3. Unless the torrent is stopped right away the market will keep pricing in the lower value of each additional dollar created.
Chart 3 - M2 Money Stock
The hope from the Treasury and the Fed is that the economy will zoom back and thus absorb the extra dollars. Hope, however, is a very, very bad policy tool. And that is something the Bond Vigilantes know very, very well. Yesterday the current 10-2 Year Treasury spread reached 126 bp, the highest in over 4 years. It's not disastrous yet, but the fast rise is a clear warning that bond investors are not happy.
I know that almost everyone these days takes their clue from the stock market. That is a an amateur's mistake, however. The bond market is far larger and far more important for the economy and is not subject to noisy nonsense like GameStop or Bitcoin. Pay attention...
The PPT or Plunge Protection Team working overtime today after a near 100 point S&P500 range just today.
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