Flip Side of the Inflation Coin

The Flip Side of Inflation
Components to Watch
Something for Everyone
Eavesdropping on Millionaires
Dallas, Paris, and Europe

The market, and maybe all of us, would like to believe the latest 3% annual CPI number was a harbinger of ever-lower inflation, and we are on the road to 2% inflation by year end. I would argue, “Not so fast.” Inflation is far from dead, and CPI will likely go slightly up between now and the end of the year. The Fed has multiple problems we will examine over the next few weeks.

The genesis for this letter came from an analysis of future inflation by my friend Ed Easterling of Crestmont Research. It wasn’t that long, and so we talked about collaborating on a letter, which we have done many times in the past. He would undertake the first draft. Since we were looking at under 1,000 words (I thought), I asked my friend Barry Habib to demonstrate why home prices are biased to rise, complicating the Fed’s work fighting inflation. “Give me 300 words tops.” So on Friday morning here in Memphis, as I started to work on the letter, I got well over 4,500 words between the two of them. Both are important, so we’ll hear from Ed today and Barry next week.

Bottom line up front? Inflation is not dead, the Fed is facing a very difficult battle against inflation for the next six months, and the rehab cycle may not be over, with one very important caveat. We’ll get to that and more over the next two weeks, but this is important to understand what monetary policy is going to be for the next 6–9–12 months. It’s complicated, and it’s not what you think.

I will have a new book out that will be in the bookstores October 3. I know I have been promising a book, so I haven’t talked about this until it’s actually finished and in the final edits. I’ll write more in the personal section, but I need your help on one final thing. Thanks.

A little background on Ed. He ran a successful fund of hedge funds in Dallas for a very long time and then transitioned to become a tree farmer and now a cattle rancher in Oregon. He has been named his county and state Tree Farmer of the Year and nationally ranked as Western Regional Tree Farmer of the Year, all while maintaining his incredible website with some of the best big-picture macroeconomic charts and graphs you’ll find anywhere.

The following discussion is based on the analysis “Inflation: Not Done Yet?” posted on CrestmontResearch.com. Any mistakes or faulty thinking are solely the responsibility of John Mauldin for interrupting Ed (Full disclosure: Ed wrote most of this.)