“It’s nice and breezy here. In Cairo one suffocates.”

-Hosni Mubarak

Suffocating your citizenry with stagflation is apparently a problem; particularly when that citizenry is young, hungry, and unemployed. By definition this is the Egypt you are seeing on your flat panel TVs today.

Hosni Mubarak  became the 4th President of Egypt in 1981. While this may be a very old country (established in 3100 BC), this 21st Century Social Revolution is being driven by the very young. Almost two-thirds of Egyptians are under the age of 30 years old , and of the 79 million people who live in Egypt, approximately 40% of them live on less than $2 a day.

The Egyptian government has been telling its people that inflation is currently running around +12%. The people of Egypt obviously don’t believe that. They shouldn’t. However they do believe that the country is running double-digit unemployment. They don’t have jobs.

Captains of Keynesian Big Government Intervention don’t use the word ‘stagflation’ very much for a reason. The last time these bubble makers plugged the world with stagflation was in the mid-to-late 1970s. That’s when US Federal Reserve Chairman, Arthur Burns, was attempting to monetize America’s debt as President Jimmy Carter bet that it would not create any globally interconnected risk. Sound familiar?

At Hedgeye, we call it stagflation when real-world inflation readings are growing faster than economic growth. Even if we were lemmings enough to believe the Egyptian government on a +12% inflation number, that would be plenty enough to justify calling this situation for what it is. Egyptian GDP is only running +5% at this stage of what Groupthink Inc. in Davos, Switzerland would have you believe is an “emerging market boom.” It’s sad.

We’ve been berating this point for the last 6 weeks, because it’s time. It’s time to recognize what America’s debauchery of the US Dollar is doing to global inflation. If US monetary policy makers are still in the camp of the willfully blind and want to believe there’s no real-world inflation out there because The Ber-nank’s conflicted and compromised calculation of CPI says so, Godspeed having the world agree with them on that.

And for all of the Fiat Fool fans who are still out there cheering this on because it’s good for the inflation in our portfolios, here’s some global starvation math we can’t hide from – immediate-term inverse correlations between the US Dollar Index and 3 major global food prices:

  1. Corn = -0.91
  2. Rice = -0.90
  3. Wheat = -0.85

Those are extremely high (and alarming) correlations. So the next time someone tells you that the US Dollar and the policy that backs it doesn’t matter to the price of the #1 food staple for 3 BILLION of the world’s people (rice), forward them the math. Risk managers like me wouldn’t be perpetuating higher food prices by trading them with a bullish bias if we didn’t fully expect American policy makers to let its currency burn.

Burning Bone? Pull up the chart. The US Dollar Index is down for 4 out of the last 5 weeks and down almost 4% since the 1st week of January.  Chaos theorists don’t have to look very far to find that incremental grain of sand that tipped the Egyptian pyramid of risk into turmoil. This is what you get when you debauch the world’s reserve currency. Global Inflation is a policy – and it’s priced in US Dollars.

Inflation kills emerging markets. Inflation kills bond markets. These are historical facts and they are also reflected in last week’s bearish price action in emerging markets:

  1. Egypt = down -15.7%
  2. Chile = down -4.2%
  3. Turkey = down -4.1%
  4. Brazil = down -3.5%
  5. India = down -3.2%
  6. Thailand = down -2.5%

We’ve been writing about Chinese Growth Slowing As Inflation Accelerates for the last few months as well. Chinese Equities, at down -2% for the YTD, are now OUTPERFORMING 15 other country equity markets, including all of the ones on this list. Inflation’s contagion is broadening its base.

Stagflation doesn’t just stop when a politician tells it to. Stagflation is sticky. Since The Ber-nank opted for Quantitative Guessing (QG2) with his fear-mongering friends in Jackson Hole, WY, the 19 commodity component CRB Commodities Index has inflated by +27%.

While that may be up less than what US stock market volatility (VIX) is up in the last 2 weeks (+29%), that’s still up a lot – and we think that both globally interconnected markets and the people living in this world outside of Washington, DC have noticed.

Since the beginning of 2011, given our outlook of Global Growth Slowing as Global Inflation Accelerates, I have not been bullish on stocks or bonds in general. That’s why I have such a large asset allocation to Cash. Last week, I raised my Cash position to 67% versus 61% at the end of the week prior. I’ve sold all of our oil and German equity exposures (and there are no rules against buying them back).

The updated Hedgeye Asset Allocation Model is as follows:

  1. Cash 67%
  2. International Currencies 21%
  3. US Equities 6%
  4. Bonds 6%
  5. Commodities 0%
  6. International Equities 0%

Again, this isn’t an asset allocation model for a fund mandated to be fully invested. This is where I’d be positioned as an individual or family who has made positive absolute returns in all 3 of the last 3 years. We’ll have plenty of opportunities in the coming weeks and months to buy things on sale.

My immediate term support and resistance levels in the SP500 are now 1273 and 1288, respectively. On Friday, I covered my short position in the SPY and moved the Hedgeye Portfolio to 8 LONGS and 7 SHORTS. I’ll continue to trade US Equities with a bearish bias provided that we don’t see a close above 1288 in the immediate-term.

Best of luck out there today,

KM

Keith R. McCullough
Chief Executive Officer

Suffocating Stagflation - EGY