How Long Will Inflation Last? Were you forwarded this email? [Sign-up to The Daily Reckoning here.]( [Unsubscribe]( [Daily Reckoning] The $64,000 Question - A history of inflation, 1973â82…
- âThe investment decisions are easy. But the forecast is hardâ…
- Then Jim Rickards shows you four factors that can cause inflation, and why only one of them is responsible for todayâs inflation… Recommended Link [Claim this $512 Credit By Thursday]( [Read more here...]( Just want to make sure you saw this: [We want to add a credit of $512 to your account for this offer.]( And I wanted to make sure you took advantage of it. If you already claimed this credit, then please ignore this message. But if you havenât⦠Then please act fast. We are giving you the chance to claim a $512 credit by this Thursday. [Click Here To Claim This Credit]( Annapolis, Maryland
April 20, 2022 [Jim Rickards]Dear Reader, We all know that inflation is here. But the question everyone wants an answer to is how long will it last? History offers some potentially powerful clues. Today we’ll take a look at them to help us estimate how long inflation will last. Headlines about “The Highest Inflation in 40 Years!” are accurate, but they don’t tell the whole story of what inflation was like in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Inflation in 1981 was 10.3%, significantly higher than the 7.9% of February 2022. Yet 1981 was not an outlier. It was part of a 10-year stretch from 1973–1982 that encompassed the worst inflation since the end of World War II. Average annual inflation over this 10-year stretch was 8.7%. There are some analysts who believe that inflation is associated with boom times in the stock market, but the opposite is true. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was 1,031.68 on Jan. 2, 1973, and closed at 1,046.54 on Dec. 31, 1982, essentially unchanged for 10 years. Over the same 10-year inflationary episode, the Dow traded as low as 632.04 at the start of 1975, a 38% drop from the level two years earlier. But that’s only a drop in nominal levels. When the index is adjusted for inflation, the drop was even steeper. The period was also marked by three recessions — 1973–75, 1980 and 1981–82. That’s the legacy of inflation from 1973–1982 — a flat stock market, three recessions and the purchasing power of a dollar cut by more than half. If inflation were to persist, an investor’s response would be straightforward. One would sell bonds; increase leverage; buy hard assets such as real estate, gold and fine art; and allocate funds to equities with underlying hard assets such as oil companies, mines and agribusinesses. If inflation were transitory, either because the Fed choked it off with interest rate hikes or external factors including pandemic effects, supply chain failures and declining demographics, one would buy Treasury securities, reduce leverage and increase allocations to equities. The investment decisions are easy. But the forecast is hard. Below, we’ll look at four factors to infer where inflation goes from here. Read on. Regards, Jim Rickards
for The Daily Reckoning P.S. No doubt about it, inflation is here. And one of the most powerful ways to protect your money is owning gold. Governments around the world and large institutional investors are stocking up on gold. That’s why I recommend that you get your hands on some gold if you haven’t already. When the panic hits, demand will explode and supplies will vanish. But I also recommend that you NOT invest in gold until you see my urgent message about the gold market. That’s right. Don’t even buy a single ounce of gold [until you see this message.]( It’s because we’re witnessing a rare occurrence in the gold market that we haven’t seen for years, and it has serious implications… [Essentially, this could be the most important message you see all year if you are serious about securing your financial future.]( What am I talking about? [Click here to see my urgent briefing.]( Recommended Link [Crypto Legend Reveals: âThe Next Bitcoinâ]( He called Bitcoin at $61. Now he says this next crypto will be even bigger. In fact, heâs targeting 25X gains over the next year alone. [Click Here To Learn More]( The Daily Reckoning Presents: Todayâs inflation is due to one factor, and thereâs no relief in sightâ¦â¦ ****************************** How Long Will Inflation Last? By Jim Rickards [Jim Rickards]How long will today’s inflation last? Deficits are the obvious place to begin with. The best way to consider debt is the debt-to-GDP ratio; you put the debt in the context of the gross income needed to service the debt. The best estimate for annual U.S. GDP as of Dec. 31, 2021, is $24 trillion. The result is a U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio of 125% ($30T ÷ $24T = 1.25). Another estimate puts the ratio at 130% as of Dec. 31, 2021. Those ratios (and projected ratios for future years) are the highest in U.S. history, higher even than at the end of World War II when it was 119%. Does the debt-to-GDP ratio matter as far as inflation is concerned? Yes and no. In the short run, probably not. There’s extensive economic literature that shows high debt-to-GDP ratios slow economic growth and put the economy on a disinflationary path. For now, it’s enough to say that economies with high debt-to-GDP ratios often flip from disinflation (or deflation) to hyperinflation almost overnight as citizens and creditors suddenly realize that inflation is the only way to escape the room. Monetary policy, our second factor, is at the top of most lists as a likely cause of inflation in the short term. In fact, it will have no inflationary impact at all and is more likely to be disinflationary. The popular view is that excessive Fed money printing must inevitably cause inflation. The Fed creates so-called base money by buying Treasury securities from banks. But those banks simply return the money to the Fed in the form of excess reserves. So that money does not enter the real economy and plays no role whatsoever in consumption or other activities that could lead to consumer price inflation. The only form of money that might lead to higher inflation is M1, the money created by commercial banks when they make loans or extend other forms of credit. Increased lending of that sort may or may not happen, but it will have little to do with the Fed. But an increase in commercial bank lending requires individuals or businesses that are willing to borrow. Right now, neither a lending appetite nor the urge to borrow is present. One area where Fed policy does touch the real economy is the creation of asset bubbles. Expanding bubbles are not particularly inflationary because the animal spirits are directed at stocks and bonds rather than consumption. Bursting bubbles can be disinflationary because they tend to change psychology in the direction of reduced consumption and higher unemployment. In short, there’s little reason to believe that current asset bubbles will contribute to inflation. There is some reason to expect that current Fed tightening through asset sales and rate hikes will cause asset bubbles to deflate, which could feed through to reduced consumption. On balance, this process is more deflationary than inflationary. Politics, the third inflationary factor, has had a clear inflationary impact, although the effect may be short-lived. Politics was the driver of massive pandemic relief packages that directed trillions of dollars to individuals, small businesses and global corporations from March 2020–March 2021. The inflationary impact of this spending came not from higher deficits or Fed monetization of the debt. The inflation came from the fact that money was pumped straight into the hands of consumers at a time when output was constrained by lockdowns and supply chain breakdowns. The result was a spending spree in the goods sector when the goods were often hard to find. By March 2021, inflation had ticked up to 2.6%, the highest since August 2018. The following month inflation hit 4.2%, the highest since September 2008. By the end of 2021, inflation was running at 7.0% rate, the highest since 1982. Today, the inflation rate is 8.5%, the highest since 1981. Recommended Link [Famous Trader: âI Canât Keep This Quietâ¦â]( [Read more here...]( A few years ago⦠After meeting with presidents⦠After getting featured in Forbes, Fox, Wired and even Playboy⦠This man stepped out of the limelight. Now heâs back with what could be [the most shocking prediction]( of his career. It could have a $16.8 trillion impact on the world economy. It could also give you a chance to get very rich... [Click Here To See How]( Supply shocks are the fourth factor that’s driving inflation. This kind of inflation is caused by the supply side rather than the demand side of an economy. The most famous example of a supply shock was the Arab oil embargo that began on Oct. 17, 1973. Between October 1973 and the end of the embargo in March 1974, the price of oil increased almost 300%. The U.S. had left itself vulnerable to the Arab oil weapon by allowing domestic oil production to decline precipitously in the early 1970s, a policy similar to that being pursued by Biden today. The impact on U.S. inflation was immediate. From a baseline of 3.3% inflation in 1972 before the embargo, inflation rose to 6.2% in 1973 and spiked to 11.1% in 1974 despite a sharp recession. The same supply shock cost-push inflation occurred during the second oil crisis in 1979. That was the result of a sharp decline in oil output due to the Iranian Revolution then. The price of oil doubled over the course of 1979. Now evidence is emerging that the U.S. and global economies are experiencing a new round of supply shocks. Instead of coming from a single commodity — oil — and a single source — the Middle East — the new supply shocks are coming from all directions as the cumulative effect of trade wars, pandemic lockdowns and supply chain breakdowns. This analysis brings us full circle. Inflation is certainly on the rise, but will it persist or fade due to offsetting factors? In the short run, inflation will persist at or about current levels (7.5% year over year). Once momentum is established, a trend rarely stops on a dime unless there is a new shock comparable to the pandemic that appeared in 2020. The better form of the question is whether inflation will maintain current levels of 8.5% or higher over the course of 2022 and 2023 or will it retreat to the 5% level and eventually levels below 3% that were the norm from 2009–2020? As described above, monetary policy is irrelevant to inflation but is highly relevant to asset bubbles. On balance, the Fed’s current efforts at monetary tightening will collapse asset bubbles in a disorderly way, which will be deflationary in its impact contrary to Fed expectations. For this reason, the Fed will not be a source of inflation in the near term. Politics will also not contribute to inflation in the near future. There’s clear evidence that the $5.5 trillion in deficit spending between March 2020 and March 2021 was a cause of the inflation that emerged in 2021. But the inflationary surges faded once the money was spent. The impact was temporary, not lasting. So monetary policy and politics will not produce persistent inflation under current conditions. Is there a factor that can drive inflation higher in the short run and possibly change consumer expectations, which will drive prices even higher? Yes. That factor is the supply chain and the emergence of supply shocks that play out in higher prices. This dynamic is not transient like helicopter money. It feeds on itself if not cured quickly. It’s beyond the control of policymakers because of the complexity of supply chains. Because of the supply chain disruptions in key commodities such as energy, food and strategic metals, inflation will persist and get worse. This is not because of the Fed or the Congress. These shocks could be alleviated by freeing up the U.S. energy sector and ending the war in Ukraine and the economic sanctions that go with it. Don’t expect any of those things to happen. Biden is in thrall to the climate alarmists so he won’t help the U.S. energy industry. Biden is also blind in Ukraine where a simple “no” to NATO membership would end the war almost overnight. Instead, investors should expect persistent inflation until the Fed causes a recession. At that point, stocks will crash and inflation will morph into deflation. The losers will be savers; retirees; and those relying on insurance, annuities, pensions and fixed-rate bonds to pay their bills. The biggest winners will be those who invest in hard assets such as oil, natural resources, gold, silver and real estate. Regards, Jim Rickards
for The Daily Reckoning P.S. No doubt about it, inflation is here. And one of the most powerful ways to protect your money is owning gold. Governments around the world and large institutional investors are stocking up on gold. That’s why I recommend that you get your hands on some gold if you haven’t already. When the panic hits, demand will explode and supplies will vanish. But I also recommend that you NOT invest in gold until you see my urgent message about the gold market. That’s right. Don’t even buy a single ounce of gold [until you see this message.]( It’s because we’re witnessing a rare occurrence in the gold market that we haven’t seen for years, and it has serious implications… [Essentially, this could be the most important message you see all year if you are serious about securing your financial future.]( What am I talking about? [Click here to see my urgent briefing.]( --------------------------------------------------------------- Thank you for reading The Daily Reckoning! We greatly value your questions and comments. Please send all feedback to [feedback@dailyreckoning.com.](mailto:dr@dailyreckoning.com) [James Rickards][James G. Rickards]( is the editor of Strategic Intelligence. He is an American lawyer, economist, and investment banker with 35 years of experience working in capital markets on Wall Street. He is the author of The New York Times bestsellers Currency Wars and The Death of Money. Add feedback@dailyreckoning.com to your address book: [Whitelist us]( Additional Articles & Commentary: [Daily Reckoning Website]( Join the conversation! Follow us on social media: [Facebook]( [LinkedIn]( [Twitter]( [RSS Feed]( [YouTube]( The Daily Reckoning is committed to protecting and respecting your privacy. We do not rent or share your email address. By submitting your email address, you consent to Paradigm Press delivering daily email issues and advertisements. To end your Daily Reckoning e-mail subscription and associated external offers sent from The Daily Reckoning, feel free to [unsubscribe here.]( Please read our [Privacy Statement](. For any further comments or concerns please email us at feedback@dailyreckoning.com. If you are having trouble receiving your Daily Reckoning subscription, you can ensure its arrival in your mailbox [by whitelisting The Daily Reckoning.]( [Paradigm Press]© 2022 Paradigm Press, LLC. 808 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202. Although our employees may answer your general customer service questions, they are not licensed under securities laws to address your particular investment situation. No communication by our employees to you should be deemed as personalized financial advice. We expressly forbid our writers from having a financial interest in any security they personally recommend to our readers. All of our employees and agents must wait 24 hours after on-line publication or 72 hours after the mailing of a printed-only publication prior to following an initial recommendation. Any investments recommended in this letter should be made only after consulting with your investment advisor and only after reviewing the prospectus or financial statements of the company. Email Reference ID: 470DRED01[.](