Commodities Do Not Cause Inflation: Money Printing Does

Commodities Do Not Cause Inflation: Money Printing Does

Commodities Do Not Cause Inflation: Money Printing Does

By printing more money to pay off their national debt, governments are increasing inflation.

In this world of monetary insanity, defenders of central bank constant easing try every day to convince you that inflation is caused by numerous factors, not by currency printing.

Many blame inflation on cost-push factors or even speculation, but ultimately all those are consequences, not causes. Rising prices are always caused by more units of currency being directed to scarce or tangible assets.

Commodities ETFs are a clear example. In 2022 investors have been purchasing these products to protect themselves from inflation and generate real returns. They are not a cause, they are a consequence. With increased inflationary concerns, the likelihood of rising interest rates, and elevated geopolitical concerns, commodities-focused funds have seen record inflows in 2022. Year to date through February 25, commodities ETFs gathered $8.5 billion of net ETF inflows according to Wealthmanagement.com. This is not the full picture, though.  According to the CFTC the total value of various commodity index-related instruments purchased by institutional investors has increased from an estimated $15 billion in 2003 to an estimated $200 billion. The global Commodity Services market size is estimated at $4 trillion in 2020, according to Market Research.

In 2020, most investors were very underweight energy and commodities. The surge in Socially Responsible Investment as well as the recent history of underperformance of commodities relative to bonds and equities had created an enormous underweight. As concerns about inflation and geopolitical events unravelled, funds re-allocated capital from underweight to equal-weight and now, in 2022, to overweight.

This happened at the same time as central banks injected unprecedented quantities of money into the economy. Between 2020 and 2021, assets of the major central banks rose by more than $10 trillion. Furthermore, broad money supply growth (M3) rose in the double-digit rate in 2020 and 2021 in the major economies.

Obviously one or two prices may rise independently due to particular events. A war can cause that, but not a generalized and widespread increase in all prices. Furthermore, commodity and food prices were already rising to multi-year highs even before the Ukraine invasion was a rumour.

Readers may believe that all this is due to trader speculation, but traders actions work both ways. Traders do not create prices; they trade on them. Furthermore, traders cannot influence the marginal price of a commodity for long if the fundamentals, inflation, and money reality are not there.  There are numerous reports from the CFTC proving that investing does not impact commodity prices. Between 2013 and 2019 commodity prices were not rising. Why? Because broad money growth was not rising above real demand for money.

Oil and gas have risen equally everywhere, yet CPI inflation is vastly different in the euro area, or the United States compared to countries where energy imports are much higher, like Japan, or Korea. Why is CPI inflation twice as high in the euro area or the US relative to those Asian countries? Much higher broad money growth in 2020-21.

The Ukraine war has created another excuse to blame inflation on oil and natural gas. However, it seems that all those who blame commodities on inflationary pressures continue to ignore the massive rise in housing and shelter, healthcare, education as well as goods and services where there was evident overcapacity. The same can be said about global food prices. The UN and FAO Global Food Price Indices have been rising steadily and reached all-time highs even before the Covid crisis.

Oil and gas will be, again, used as an excuse for inflation while low interest rates and massive currency creation remain. But the reality is that when both deflate somehow, the problem of currency debasement will remain.

Inflation was already higher than the CPI measure suggested before the Covid-19 crisis. The rise in non-replicable goods and services, shelter, healthcare, fresh food and education was significantly higher than the consumer price index percentage. According to Deutsche Bank, these were rising up to five times faster than CPI.  There was high inflation in the things that we consume every day even in the days when some said there was “no inflation”.

Now, the increase in broad money has translated to an explosion in all prices, energy-related or not. Some will blame wages; others will blame the Ukraine war and others will blame the weak recovery. The fact is that currency destruction is at the heart of generalized price rises everywhere. The rest are anecdotes or consequences, not causes.

More units of currency are going to scarce assets looking for protection against inflation. This is not speculation; it is protection from currency debasement.

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Daniel Lacalle

Global Economy Expert

Daniel Lacalle is one the most influential economists in the world. He is Chief Economist at Tressis SV, Fund Manager at Adriza International Opportunities, Member of the advisory board of the Rafael del Pino foundation, Commissioner of the Community of Madrid in London, President of Instituto Mises Hispano and Professor at IE Business School, London School of Economics, IEB and UNED. Mr. Lacalle has presented and given keynote speeches at the most prestigious forums globally including the Federal Reserve in Houston, the Heritage Foundation in Washington, London School of EconomicsFunds Society Forum in Miami, World Economic ForumForecast Summit in Peru, Mining Show in Dubai, Our Crowd in Jerusalem, Nordea Investor Summit in Oslo, and many others. Mr Lacalle has more than 24 years of experience in the energy and finance sectors, including experience in North Africa, Latin America and the Middle East. He is currently a fund manager overseeing equities, bonds and commodities. He was voted Top 3 Generalist and Number 1 Pan-European Buyside Individual in Oil & Gas in Thomson Reuters’ Extel Survey in 2011, the leading survey among companies and financial institutions. He is also author of the best-selling books: “Life In The Financial Markets” (Wiley, 2014), translated to Portuguese and Spanish ; The Energy World Is Flat” (Wiley, 2014, with Diego Parrilla), translated to Portuguese and Chinese ; “Escape from the Central Bank Trap” (2017, BEP), translated to Spanish. Mr Lacalle also contributes at CNBCWorld Economic ForumEpoch TimesMises InstituteHedgeyeZero HedgeFocus Economics, Seeking Alpha, El EspañolThe Commentator, and The Wall Street Journal. He holds a PhD in Economics, CIIA financial analyst title, with a post graduate degree in IESE and a master’s degree in economic investigation (UCV).

   
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