This
is an annual update. We continue reporting on and predicting the evolution of
the difference between the core consumer price index (CPI) and the index for
food (beverages not included). Previously, we confirmed in many posts and
papers that this difference had been following a long-term negative and almost linear
trend since 2001. Originally, we predicted
a turn to a positive trend in 2014. A
year ago, we expected the turn to a positive trend in 2012. Currently, we have
new estimates of the core and food CPI
through November 2012 and can re-estimate the duration of the negative trend
and its bottom value. For an investor dealing with commodities, the index of
food, which continues to grow at a rate higher than the core CPI, is an
important reference for any action. Food price affects not only economic but
also social and political processes.
Figure
1 depict the most recent period. In 2008, when we first addressed the issue of
sustainable trends in CPIs, the trend line was much steeper than now and intersected
the zero line in 2014. This was our initial
estimate of the turning point for the negative trend. The zero line was
considered as a natural level of resistance.
In the beginning of 2009, the difference reached the bottom and turned
to a positive one, although not for long. The growth in food prices restarted
in 2010. In the end of 2011, the difference had a short stop which we likely
misinterpreted as a manifestation of the transition to a positive trend. Since October
2011, the difference has not been changing.
There
are three possibilities of the future evolution. Firstly, the possibility of a
turning point in 2012 is not excluded. Secondly,
the difference may suffer a further fall before it reaches its absolute historical
minimum observed in 1979. Figure 2 illustrates this assumption and implies that
with the current values of the level (-4.5) and the rate of fall (-2 units of
index per year) the bottom (-8.5) will be reached in 2014. Thirdly, the bottom value
may be expressed in relative values. Figure 3 displays the difference between
the core and food CPI normalized to the core CPI. In relative terms, the minimum
was in 1974 and much deeper than in absolute terms. Falling along the current
trend the normalized difference will reach the bottom only in the 2020s. This
is the worst case scenario involving a significant rise in food prices through
the 2010s.
Figure 2. The difference between the core CPI and the price index of food between 1960 and November 2012.
Figure 3. The
difference between the core CPI and the price index of food normalized to the
core CPI.
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