A snapshot view of commodities reveals that they have all experienced some mild recovery at the end of the month of October, as liqudation pressure caused by the deleveraging of hedge fund Ā and bank balance sheets which wreaked havoc on markets during the month subsided. Its been little more than a week since TARPĀ began deploying funds in aĀ meaningful way. Also, another factor seems to have been the destabilization that was caused by the covering of short positions in Dollar/Yen carry trades that forced further liquidation in equity and commodity markets making October 2008 the worst month in 21 years. These conditionsĀ have been profoundlyĀ deflationary.
The following chart shows how as a result of high commodity prices the daily cost of living rose incrementally to a high of an additional cost per capita of $4.77. While the turmoil in commodity market has been terrible for investors, the turn has been beneficial to comsumers, who are now enjoying a $2.58 dividend off the resultant cheaper cost of living.
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In the above chart we calculated the '08 price change of the major food and energy commodities in the CRB index (Corn, Soy, Wheat, Cattle, Hogs, Oil and Natural Gas) and multiplied the changes by the annual per capita consumption of each item.Ā While this method may oversimplify the actual costs, it provides a good idea of how changes in commodity prices have impacted consumers wallets this year. (Bespoke)
Volatility in commodities is sure to continue and their prices have still a long way to go before theĀ upper limitĀ of the current downtrend line is broken. Under present circumstances, if you consider the economic growth numbers for the US economy continue to show up in the negative GDP growth and the credit market volatility continues to reign on the markets' parade, commodity prices could faceĀ more downward pressure.Ā
Charts: Bespoke Investment Group