Priced
in gold and stocks, wheat is near multi-decade lows. That may not
last.
Measuring
the cost of anything in currency can be misleading. As
we know, inflation can be gamed by authorities to appear low, and
supposedly low inflation is actually high inflation if wages are
declining while prices rise.
Longtime correspondent Harun I. has often
recommended in these pages that we look to other yardsticks to get a
more realistic assessment of price and value.
For
example, what is the cost of wheat when priced in gold rather than
dollars?Harun
has graciously provided a chart of the wheat/gold ratio, which I
marked up to identify when gold was expensive and wheat was cheap,
and vice versa.
Priced in gold, wheat is at multi-decade lows;
technically, this long downtrend appears to have reversed into an
uptrend. If this is so, the only direction in the price of wheat
(priced in gold) is up.
Here
is wheat priced in the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA). In
essence, how many bushels of wheat can be purchased with one share of
the Dow index?
In 1975, at the nadir of the stagflation-ridden
stock market, wheat was expensive and the Dow cheap–once again,
this is pricing wheat in the Dow, not the dollar.
At the top of the stock market bubble in 2000,
the Dow was expensive and wheat was cheap.
When the Dow hit bottom in March 2009, wheat
went up when priced in stock market shares.
Despite some impressive volatility since 2000,
the trend in the price of wheat (when priced in stocks) is clearly
up. Once again, it seems a long-term downtrend in the price of wheat
has reversed and is now an uptrend.
The
only way for wheat to regain its previous trading range is for gold
and the Dow to both plummet or for wheat to rise in cost,
i.e. it takes more gold or shares of the Dow to buy a bushel of
wheat.
Priced
in gold and stocks, wheat is near multi-decade lows. That may not
last.Technically
the trend has reversed, suggesting much higher prices–in dollars,
gold or stocks–for wheat and indeed, by extension, for all food.
We
may be tasting the first minimal increases in food prices that could
soar to unimagined heights in the years ahead.Want
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