Thursday, February 3, 2011

Food Crisis 2011 - Will Politics Trump Markets?

While we in Singapore complain about the high price of barbeque pork slices, a favourite Chinese New Year food, high food prices have had far less sanguine effects on the poorer parts of the world, as we have seen from the political turmoil in Tunisia, Egypt and the rest of that region of the world. Wheat prices have hit a 30-month high and have doubled since a low in mid-2010, and this has obviously had a negative impact on Egypt, who has to import around half of its annual consumption.

With developing countries close to screaming in pain from the inflation exported by the United States through Bernanke's disastrous quantitative easing policy, I have to wonder how much more food prices have to go up before Hillary Clinton tells Bernanke and the President's Working Group on Financial Markets (the so-called 'Plunge Protection Team') to step in and cool things down.

As an aside, I tend to think that Obama is a mere teleprompter-reading puppet who has neither the intelligence nor experience to deal with such complex issues, and that Mrs. Clinton is the real brains behind such matters. Being a Marxist agitator ('community organiser') in the Saul Alinsky tradition in Chicago is not a real job.

Such an intervention in the commodities market is not without precedent. It had happened before in 2008 during what Donald Coxe, chairman of Coxe Advisors LLC, called the 'Saturday Night Massacre', where it was thought that the US government, working through its Wall Street connections, hammered down commodity prices through the futures market. The only difference between now and 2008 was that the US political class had a vested interest in having commodity prices down due to the then-impending Presidential Elections. As for the present situation, I would argue that being the sole (albeit declining) superpower in the world, the US has a vested interest in trying to keep things under control, especially when it comes to the Middle East, where it is engaged in protracted wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that it has no hope of winning. Allowing things to further deteriorate will definitely have a negative impact on the global economy, on the stability of the Middle East and possibly on the supply and price of oil.

Be that as it may, looking at the various charts of agricultural commodities, rice has just broke its sideways pattern to move up to a 27-month high while wheat and corn may still have further upside. That said, I am wary of getting into long positions, as my sense of the consensus view is that too many people think prices will keep going up due to supply challenges underpinning the fundamental picture of food commodities. The fundamentals are correct, but with the CCI breaking record after record on the upside, I am just worried that the opinions are too one-sided and that there is a speculative frenzy feedback loop fed by the ongoing social unrest. Since I am somewhat a kiasu person, I am most likely going to sit out this episode of price movements.

And given that rice prices have start to move, we need to be on a lookout for protests and social unrest in those parts of the world where rice is the major staple food. So far, our region has been spared unrest, but don't count on that to continue if rice prices start to move aggressively up like wheat and corn.

In the meantime, I'll be thankful for the abundant food available here in Singapore and enjoy my Chinese New Year.

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