Martin Hutchinson On Disaster Rising..

Hedge funds are increasingly moving out of trading in futures to directly investing in physical commodities, increasing the possibility of a dangerous shortage of those commodities:

Martin Hutchinson:

“Only when the gold price breaks definitively downwards, dropping 25% or more from its high, will policymakers know that they have succeeded in breaking the commodity investment mania. Such a development is however likely to occur only after a definitive crack in government bond markets, forcing policymakers to address their gigantic budget deficits as a matter of urgency.

Given the predilections of today’s policymakers, it is unfortunately unlikely that they will tighten monetary policy sufficiently to break the commodity flight, whatever the gold price does. Instead, led by the determined Keynesians of the International Monetary Fund, they are much more likely to attempt to control the gold price itself, either surreptitiously by selling off massive quantities of the world’s gold reserves, or openly by imposing limits on gold futures trading and possibly, like Franklin Roosevelt in 1933, making it illegal for ordinary individuals to own gold or to buy gold futures.

That will of course only make matters worse; it would be equivalent to trying to avoid a speeding ticket by smashing the car’s speedometer. Manipulating the gold price to pretend that liquidity is not excessive does not stop liquidity from being excessive. Nor does it lead any but the stupidest institutional investor to believe that his urge to invest in physical commodities is misguided. Rather, it will cause commodities investment to be carried out through shell companies in tax havens, away from regulators’ radar screens. The effect on global supply chains will be equally damaging, but policymakers will no longer have a straightforward way of determining how to avoid the resulting economic depression.

I wrote last week that tightening liquidity directly by entering into a central bank “exit strategy” is dangerous. However , the Financial Time’s story itself and the gold price breakthrough have significantly increased the size of the hike in interest rates necessary to halt the flight to commodities.

Time is short and the probability of disaster is rising.”

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