Bond Market Worried About Inflation

Scott Grannis: This is an interesting chart, but now I have a quibble.In a recent chart on commodities, you defined the 2000-2011 era as the "easy money era," in contrast with the tight money 1980-2000.Yet this chart shows TIPS yields going down in the 2000s. Down! And 10-year Treasuries too. Down!Milton Friedman said low interest rates are a sign of tight money, especially sustained low interest rates. Interest rates have largely trended dwon in the post-2000 era.Ergo, the 2000s have not been an "easy money" era. If we have had "easy money" since 2000, where is the inflation and high interest rates? Somehow, your definitions do not hold water.

That's a fair point. I would counter by arguing that a) the bond market does not always anticipate the future, and b) monetary policy acts on the economy and the markets with a "long and variable lag," as Milton Friedman taught us. I have noted before that the big drop in interest rates and inflation in late 2008 was the result of an involuntary tightening of monetary policy (the market's demand for money surged as a result of the financial market collapse, and the Fed was slow to respond). Since then, however, the Fed has been generous with its supply of liquidity, and interest rates and inflation expectations are trending higher. This trend will likely become more evident in the years to come.

Scott:Keep up the great work, and thanks for tolerating a quibble from a layman.Even when I have a quibble, I always rely on Calafia Beach for my main understanding of the economy and markets.

The Federal Reserves track record is about as good as the bond or equity markets. Ergo we are in deep trouble in the future...

Respectfully disagree and I believe the concern about QE2 is overblown...Question Don't we need a pick up in wage demands for inflation to take a hold. We have had 11 recessions since 1947 and all of them had a long term unemployed rate ( 27 weeks or longer)to labor force of 1% or lower....we are currently at 4%...too much slack especially with regard to labor

Wages are usually the last thing to go up in a rising inflation environment. Inflation is devastating for the average person precisely because his/her wages are always lagging the rise in prices. Inflation is not a wage phenomenon, it's a monetary phenomenon.

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