General A thread to discuss and follow the incoming inflation bomb

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kneeblock

Drapetomaniac
Apr 18, 2015
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Where before I was reasonably confident the inflation worries were at best a temporary blip, now I'm resoundingly confident the idea is an influence campaign to control monetary policy. @Splinty @Let Love Lead let's have a friendly wager on this. The CPI rose this month by 0.8%. I will bet that by October, the average monthly increase will be no greater than 0.2% if not in the negative. If inflation is running away, this prediction should easily fail. If I lose, I'll pay each of you the difference in how much higher it is times $100, e.g. 1.0-0.2=0.8 * 100=80 or 0.5-0.2=0.3 * 100=30 etc. If I win, you both donate 0.2% of your 2020 tax return to a charitable cause of my choosing.
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
47,641
59,530
If you look at the amount of housing supply shortage in the United States, Even with a huge increase in new housing units we will be behind for several more years. So even with a focused effort we're several years from seeing housing prices start to moderate and even then I don't think it'll be a bust.
Because of housing supply running up the cost of existing houses you can now justify increased remodel and new build cost as well and all of their associated products.
Looking at the lag on supply chain and significantly increase demand for the moderate future timeline I think you'll see a moderating of wood prices 18 or 24 months from now but probably no bust either.

We're in a new normal for like 5 years here unless some significant supply changes happen.
I'm thinking we head to the $800-$900 range by Q4 which is a considerable pullback from our current $1495. From there, the new normal will likely settle around $700. To your point, the housing market is still undersupplied so demand should remain somewhat strong even as the supply increases a bit. I don't know that we'll see it fall too low - and I certainly don't think we'll ever see wood under $300 again.

Print was at $1495 Friday, but cash offers are being closed in the low $1500 range this week. That is a much smaller gap than what we've seen in the last 3 or 4 months (typically a $150+ bump from print for cash). Current futures (July) is down limit again today to $1264. That will put further downward pressure on the cash market.

Mills learned a lot during this run, and they'll keep their order files full before they flood the market with wood - even when the labor supply allows them to make as much wood as they want. Yes - I had to get that in there. ?
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
47,641
59,530
Oregon is pushing out Tons of giant high quality trees that were burnt in the massive non arson fires here last year...Big Big trees...That will probably last for a few years...I-5 is a steady stream of lumber going south and north out of this area

Just throwing that into the wood discussion
Around here, most builders can't take SPFs wood because their plans typically call for SPF. The "s" (harvested south of Canada) can't be subbed because SPF is graded with a higher value, even though both grades are likely fine for most applications.

Although with lumber being the way it is, I'm sure many builders are deviating from their typical "No-s" restrictions.
 
M

member 1013

Guest
Where before I was reasonably confident the inflation worries were at best a temporary blip, now I'm resoundingly confident the idea is an influence campaign to control monetary policy. @Splinty @Let Love Lead let's have a friendly wager on this. The CPI rose this month by 0.8%. I will bet that by October, the average monthly increase will be no greater than 0.2% if not in the negative. If inflation is running away, this prediction should easily fail. If I lose, I'll pay each of you the difference in how much higher it is times $100, e.g. 1.0-0.2=0.8 * 100=80 or 0.5-0.2=0.3 * 100=30 etc. If I win, you both donate 0.2% of your 2020 tax return to a charitable cause of my choosing.
You really want my 10 bucks that bad bruv?!?
 

Rambo John J

Baker Team
First 100
Jan 17, 2015
75,628
74,695
Around here, most builders can't take SPFs wood because their plans typically call for SPF. The "s" (harvested south of Canada) can't be subbed because SPF is graded with a higher value, even though both grades are likely fine for most applications.

Although with lumber being the way it is, I'm sure many builders are deviating from their typical "No-s" restrictions.
Most trucks appear to be headed south on I-5 for whatever that is worth, the lumber yards are full of lumber here it appears.
Sucks to be right in the center of all the wood and have these unreal prices.

I have plans for a tall garage with apartment on top that I am gonna hold off on for a lil bit.
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
47,641
59,530
Most trucks appear to be headed south on I-5 for whatever that is worth, the lumber yards are full of lumber here it appears.
Sucks to be right in the center of all the wood and have these unreal prices.

I have plans for a tall garage with apartment on top that I am gonna hold off on for a lil bit.
Yeah, I'd wait on the addition.

And it doesn't matter where the tree is milled. If it is cut or processed outside of Canada it gets the SPFs designation. Just another example of bureaucracy making things more difficult.
 
M

member 1013

Guest
kneeblock @kneeblock I don’t want your money and I’m not supposed to gamble for my addiction issues, but if you’re right I will give 600 Canadian to a charity of your choice. There is a big part of me that wants to pull a Mcgregor and end up giving it to a rival charity but I’ll try not to.
 

kneeblock

Drapetomaniac
Apr 18, 2015
12,435
22,917
kneeblock @kneeblock I don’t want your money and I’m not supposed to gamble for my addiction issues, but if you’re right I will give 600 Canadian to a charity of your choice. There is a big part of me that wants to pull a Mcgregor and end up giving it to a rival charity but I’ll try not to.
Well, I don't want to contribute to anyone falling off any kind of wagon. You and I can do a simple screen name bet.
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
47,641
59,530
I'll pay each of you the difference in how much higher it is times $100, e.g. 1.0-0.2=0.8 * 100=80 or 0.5-0.2=0.3 * 100=30 etc. If I win, you both donate 0.2% of your 2020 tax return
 
M

member 1013

Guest
Well, I don't want to contribute to anyone falling off any kind of wagon. You and I can do a simple screen name bet.
I don’t mind giving to charities... but am I still gambling? Lol I need to think about this.
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
47,641
59,530
I'm thinking we head to the $800-$900 range by Q4 which is a considerable pullback from our current $1495. From there, the new normal will likely settle around $700. To your point, the housing market is still undersupplied so demand should remain somewhat strong even as the supply increases a bit. I don't know that we'll see it fall too low - and I certainly don't think we'll ever see wood under $300 again.

Print was at $1495 Friday, but cash offers are being closed in the low $1500 range this week. That is a much smaller gap than what we've seen in the last 3 or 4 months (typically a $150+ bump from print for cash). Current futures (July) is down limit again today to $1264. That will put further downward pressure on the cash market.

Mills learned a lot during this run, and they'll keep their order files full before they flood the market with wood - even when the labor supply allows them to make as much wood as they want. Yes - I had to get that in there. ?
Midweek shows momentum in lumber pricing is slowing considerably.

Whether this is a reaction to lower futures or an actual demand/supply rebalance remains to be seen.

Floods in Texas slowing demand for sure.

I think wholesalers back away and buyers take their foot off the gas to see what happens. My bet is we're flat this week, and next week we'll see the first drop in lumber prices in 30 weeks.

How significant the drop and how long it lasts is the question. Still plenty of activity in the field so it sort of depends on how much material the mills want to hold on to. It's a poker game now - and each side is waiting for the other guy to blink.

Sometimes this job is fun.
 

ThatOneDude

Commander in @Chief, Dick Army
First 100
Jan 14, 2015
35,390
34,114
Midweek shows momentum in lumber pricing is slowing considerably.

Whether this is a reaction to lower futures or an actual demand/supply rebalance remains to be seen.

Floods in Texas slowing demand for sure.

I think wholesalers back away and buyers take their foot off the gas to see what happens. My bet is we're flat this week, and next week we'll see the first drop in lumber prices in 30 weeks.

How significant the drop and how long it lasts is the question. Still plenty of activity in the field so it sort of depends on how much material the mills want to hold on to. It's a poker game now - and each side is waiting for the other guy to blink.

Sometimes this job is fun.
So you're saying there's a chance I could build another house this year?
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
47,641
59,530
Yea but that's not 400%...soooooooooooooooooooo

I got a quote to have a nice sized log cabin built, I laughed.
And then cried.
You have a Stihl chain saw, right?
Put your wife to work.
 

Hauler

Been fallin so long it's like gravitys gone
Feb 3, 2016
47,641
59,530
LOL NO
I have an actual workhorse of a saw.
A 16 inch Craftsman 2 stroke. I'm over here mixing gas and slapping ass.
Maybe you should lower your expectations.

Instead of a log cabin, fire up that Craftsman and trim your bushes.
 

Wintermute

Putin is gay
Apr 24, 2015
5,816
9,190
Not sure if you guys read Peter Zeihan, he's a demographic and economic analyst. This is his latest email dispatch:

The United States is experiencing the fastest increase in prices since at least the peak of the subprime boom back in 2008 - in April inflation was already up 4.2% from a year earlier – generating waves of criticism for the Biden administration, whose spending plans are credited with artificially spiking demand. (Normally, the government aims to keep annual increases below 2.0%). At first blush, I really don’t see the April data as a big deal. Everyone remember what was going on a year ago? Coronavirus-induced lockdowns cratered demand, which meant that prices were falling quite a bit. This 4.2% increase from a year earlier is really just a reversion to the mean.

But that said, yeah, it is going to get much, much worse over the next year or so.

Arguably the single biggest reason for the price increases is that Americans are getting out. The country is now majority vaccinated and since COVID is a respiratory pathogen, it has more difficulty spreading when people are outdoors. Aside from the most introverted of agoraphobes who have loved COVID lockdowns, everyone is jonesing to get out of their home this summer and to some version of “normal”.

Market tightness will become particularly noticeable in food. Traditionally, half the food consumed (by value) is eaten outside of the home. A year ago when the lockdowns began, there was simply too much steak and cheese and bacon and not enough flour and chicken and milk. Agricultural production and processing systems contorted to make the adjustment. Now everything is going the opposite direction. There isn’t enough steak and cheese and bacon to support rapidly-shifting demand patterns.

Energy is rapidly evolving to match, for reasons typical, atypical, and downright weird. There’s a normal seasonal increase in demand as farmers start planting in March, and as spring breakers hit their “hold my beer” parties. That increase doesn’t typically stop until autumn. So cyclically, we’re on the “normal” early part of the demand ramp up. And it is happening as Americans are starting to get back to their lives and so are driving more. And we have summer car vacation season just around the corner that pretty much everyone is looking forward to. Hell, I am planning a road trip. I hate road trips and yet I. Cannot. Wait!

On top of that we’ve had a few hiccups across the energy sphere. A container ship clogged the Suez Canal for a week, blocking about 10% of global energy flows. Texas had a freak freeze that took some 3 million barrels of crude production - over 20% of US output - offline for a couple weeks, along with all the downstream refining and petrochemical work that actually brings us usable products like plastics and diapers and tires and cosmetics and…face masks. Russian hacker group DarkSide took down the Colonial Pipeline for nearly as long, interrupting gasoline flows to half the Eastern Seaboard. A new, horrific COVID wave in India is threatening port operations, potentially impacting half the country’s oil supply. Individually, each is an event of global significance. Together? Damn.

Nor are Americans staying put. The Boomers, America’s largest-ever generation, are moving to warmer locales as they retire en masse. The Millennials, America’s second-largest-ever generation, are moving away from the major coastal cities to places where they can afford single-family homes so they can raise their new families. No one wants to be in a bus or subway everyday where they might be exposed to COVID. Collectively, mass relocations are adding huge demand pressures to any and all suburban locations, particularly those in the South, Southwest, and Mountain West.

In the world of manufacturing, the pressure is even greater. On the demand side we’ve seen a lot of sloshing around this past year as people in waves decide they all need new computers or phones or home additions or furniture. We’ve not seen this level of erratic consumer behavior in the modern era. The world of global manufactures simply cannot keep up, and retooling to meet demand in one area almost by definition means insufficient supply for another. The issue of the current quarter is surging demand for electronics has meant there are not enough semiconductors available for automobile manufacture.

The broader supply side is a more national issue. American firms, rightly spooked by disruptions physical, political and medical are relocating many of their supply systems to North America to insulate themselves from global disruptions. The shale revolution has made energy costs locally lower than they are globally, while the U.S. workforce’s high productivity has made most manufacturing processes cheaper to operate in North America than East Asia. Of course, the industrial plant first needs to be built, and that absorbs just as many material inputs as expanding the housing stock.

There’s also a big risk on the near horizon. If the Biden administration’s signaling bears out, the United States will be boycotting the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing. That will turn what is an ongoing trade cold war into a full collapse of economic relations. Every American firm operating in China will need to decamp, either because the Chinese confiscate everything as punishment or because their competitors start slapping them with the label of “sponsors of the Genocide Olympics”. We probably are only seeing the tip of the proverbial iceberg in terms of relocation-driven manufacturing price pressures.

So far, Americans don’t care about the price increases, and they aren’t likely to soon. If you fear the subway, you will pay a premium to not have to use it. If you do not want to shovel snow, you will pay a premium to not have to do it. If your home improvement project is already three-quarters finished, you will pay a premium to complete it. If your new home office has demonstrated to you that you need a better set of headphones and a newer computer, you will pay a premium to get them. If you have not eaten out in a year, that first time out - the first twenty times out - you are going to have yourself a damn steak. Personally, I find myself in four of these five categories. Add in my shiny new snow blower and I’m in four and a half.
In the remainder of 2021 and throughout 2022 the United States will experience the highest levels of inflation since at least the 1970s. And if relations with the Chinese really do tank, the United States will be looking at World War II levels of price increases.

American citizens can afford it. Multiple federal bailout programs by two presidents have put cash in pockets; Americans now have record cash on hand. One often-missed aspect of the most recent COVID mitigation plan is to nearly double the child tax credit, and make half of it pre-paid in monthly installments. Those checks start reaching Americans July 15.

American companies can afford it. Those bailout programs benefit American firms just as much as they benefit the American people. Arguably more in some cases. Without them the airlines would have had to ground over half their fleets, and we wouldn’t be nearly half as far along on retooling our industrial plant. Even small firms like ours have benefited. State support not only helped us maintain the staff we’ve spent 15 years building, but even expand a bit. (Incidentally, we hope to have our disaster assistance loan paid back this calendar year. But regardless, everyone say hi to our new researcher!)

Collectively, this government spending expansion is the largest since World War II, and it is not the story’s end. The Federal Reserve has expanded the money supply to purchase government debt to pay for all the new spending as well as to purchase bonds on private markets to backstop everything from city spending to corporate spending to the mortgage market to student debt to credit cards.

(For those of you who obsess about Fed actions as harbingers of the American Apocalypse or vanguards of the imminent dominance of Bitcoin, curb your enthusiasm. Yes, the Fed has expanded M2 by roughly one-fifth since COVID began to just shy of $20 trillion, and yes that is clearly inflationary. BUT… First, over half that increase was in the first month of COVID. That was over a year ago now, and…no Apocalypse. Second, the U.S. economy is bigger than $20 trillion and the USD is the world’s primary method of exchange and primary store of value, so a moderate monetary expansion just doesn’t get my motor running. Third and most importantly, the Chinese have expanded their money supply to $35 trillion despite their economy being smaller than America’s and very little of the yuan supply being traded internationally. Please obsess about the right thing and adjust your forecasts and plans accordingly.)

Between the breaking of a year-long claustrophobic containment and government actions, Americans are gobbling up a whole lot of everything. Rising prices reflect all this.

This does not mean the price increases don’t matter, and I’m not limiting the things-that-matter to the normal bugaboos of inflation as regards spending capacity, wealth generation, debt levels, income stress, and mid-term economic growth trajectories. The country - the world - is changing, and inflation is hitting us all a bit differently than before.

First, a lot of jobs that existed pre-COVID are simply gone. COVID gave many firms no option but to automate away as many manhours as possible. McDonalds and Pizza Hut have practically turned into Sonic. Now that the recovery is underway, but income support has not stopped, folks who used to earn less than $16 an hour are either waiting for benefits to run out or looking for jobs with better compensation. That’s nudging employers with lower-pay positions to automate more. Most of what few of those jobs might have survived COVID will not survive the recovery.

COVID also encouraged online shopping to a degree and for a duration which suggests most retail locations will simply not recover. The jobs lost in the retail sector are among people on the low-end of the income spectrum, disproportionately impacting women, Blacks and Hispanics. The most impacted individuals are those who have the lowest education levels and the most difficulty adapting to changed circumstances. They are also the people least able to function in a higher-inflation environment. America’s inequality issues are on the cusp of becoming far, far worse. We can look forward to that being reflected in American politics throughout this next political cycle. More Trumps. More Sanders.

Second, the inequality issue isn’t simply within the United States, but between the United States and the rest of the world. The United States will largely be finished with its vaccination program in about a month, enabling it to experience the fastest economic growth of its history. We’re talking in excess of 10% annually. That’s China-doping-statistics sort of growth. The United Kingdom and Israel are finishing their vaccinations on a similar timeframe. Vaccine diplomacy from Washington will soon flood Canada and Mexico with more than enough doses to enable them to join the party by the end of August. Europe is unlikely to join in until at least the fourth quarter. More likely year’s end.

---
 

Wintermute

Putin is gay
Apr 24, 2015
5,816
9,190
And…that’s about it for now. The vaccine formulas that work and that the U.S. will soon have an excess of - Pfizer and Moderna - require two shots and primarily freezer storage, making both broadly unsuitable for the developing world. For most of the world’s population, mass vaccination cannot begin until 2022 and it will be at a much slower rate than what we have seen in America.

The timing of all this is beyond unfortunate. Most of the world’s investment capital comes from people who are on the cusp of retirement. They’re shoving every spare dollar, euro, pound or yen they have into their retirement savings. Once they flip into retirement, they never add to their nest egg again. Collectively the Boomer generation of the world is the largest generation our species has ever generated, and they, on average, retire next year. Capital has never been as easy to access or on cheaper terms as it will be in this calendar year.

America, and a few other lucky countries, are experiencing this capital surge and record growth at the same time. Such a happy confluence of events is the sort of thing that enables firms and governments to lay down development efforts that will last for decades. I may have a boatload of reservations about all the new spending the Biden administration wants to launch, but I have to admit, if it is going to happen, the time is absolutely now.

For the rest of the world, they are missing the last global capital boom of our lives. Most of the global Boomer cadre did not have kids. Which means that as they age they will instead absorb capital from their respective systems in the form of higher health care and pensions costs, while never again paying into those systems. Those costs of capital won’t simply increase by end-2022, they'll skyrocket. For those of you who don't understand what "skyrocket" means, increasing the interest rate on your mortgage loan by just 1% means increasing your monthly payment by 20%. Now apply that to everything. Car loans. Credit card debt. Municipal bonds. The federal debt. Everything. By the time the rest of the world emerges from under the pall of coronavirus, it’ll be too late.

The United States, France and New Zealand are the only exceptions to these patterns in the advanced world. The Boomers in those three countries had kids. They’re the people that we know as the Millennials, the oldest of which are now 42. Their consumption is keeping these three systems ticking on, and in about a decade American, French and Kiwi Millennials will become major savers and investors and they will bit by bit regenerate the capital stock in their respective countries. But there are not appreciable numbers of Millennials in any other advanced nation. Add in that the vast bulk of the developing world has experienced baby busts more traumatic than anything that’s happened in the developing world these past five decades and this is pretty much it for capital supplies globally.

Folks, this is it. Globalization is over. Even if the Americans decided that they wanted to continue to patrol the world, even if the Americans could keep making the world safe for international trade, global demographics and global capital tell us the page has already turned. Global aging meant that global consumption and investment was always going to collapse this decade, and then coronavirus moved the end forward. Most countries will never recover economically to where they were at the beginning of 2020 when the health crisis struck. And now countries must deal with the intertwined nightmares of a collapse in global consumption, rising economic nationalism in the small handful of countries that retain decent demographic structures, and a high inflation environment triggered by the American recovery.