Silver price

January 6th, 2010

I have imported silver prices from Kitco. The numbers may contain errors but overall, they should be roughly right. There are two series: a yearly series from 1792, and a daily series from 1984 onwards.

There are several points in history which may be interesting to look at.

  1. 1785, US adopts a silver standard.
  2. 1803, Jefferson buys Louisiana.
  3. 1821, Britain adopts the gold standard.
  4. 1848, the gold rush begins in California.
  5. 1861, civial war following the 1857 banking crisis.
  6. 1870, major silver mines are found in CA, NV, etc.
  7. 1873, the US adopts the gold standard (the crime of 73), leaving China alone on the silver standard.
  8. 1929, the Great Depression begins.
  9. 1935, China goes off the silver standard following the act of 1934. Hyperinflation follows the civil war.
  10. 1979, the Hunt brothers corner the market and get a margin call. Volcker is sworn in and reins inflation by raising interest rates to the roof.
  11. Feb 1, 2006, Ben Bernanke is sworn when the silver price is at $9.77 per oz and gold at $567 per oz.

I found a chart on the web from year 1344 to 2004, which I am including here. I don’t know who is the author of this wonderful chart.

600 year history of silver price

linksLinks:

Kitco

amznBooks:

A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960

This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly

The Great Wave: Price Revolutions and the Rhythm of History

seriesSeries of interest:

Historical silver price since 1792

Gold per silver, recent daily series

Gold per silver, annually since 1792

Silver price and US inflation

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Crime data added

January 3rd, 2010

I have added crime data from the FBI Uniform crime report database. As noted in their page, inferring causation from such data can be difficult.

All data are events, per 100,000 inhabitants, per annum.

linksLinks:

FBI crime report database

amznBooks:

The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference

seriesSeries of interest:

Car theft in Fresno, CA

Fresno unemployment rate and personal income

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is the government getting bigger?

December 18th, 2009

One way to look at this is: how much money does the government take as a percentage of GDP? This is suggested by Martin L. Gross in his book, National Suicide, where he suggests that taxes now account for 41% of GDP. It looks otherwise, and it’s hard to say which numbers he used in his calculation. Here’s the chart below of federal receipts, which include tax receipts.

Note that Bill Clinton presided over the 1992-2000 period, and Gerald Ford from 1974-1979, followed by Jimmy Carter.

Taxes go up during world wars, but do not come down once the threat has subsided.

linksLinks:

Martin Gross interview

amznBooks:

National Suicide: How Washington Is Destroying the American Dream from A to Z

seriesSeries of interest:

Federal receipts as a percentage of GDP

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Yield curve

December 13th, 2009

Bloomberg announced today that the difference between the 30-year bond yield and the 2-year bond yield hit a high not seen in 30 years (about 4%). Why this might be true, I think it’s both misleading and rather uninformative.

As you can see from the graph below, which shows the difference between the 30-year low and the 2-year low, the spread was above 3.5% in October 1992, just prior to Bill Clinton getting elected with the motto: “it’s the economy, stupid”. Notice the nice build-up before that.

Why is that not surprising? The 2-year bond is essentially controlled by the Federal Reserve through its Fed funds rate. The long bond reflects the credit-worthiness of the US. When the economy stalls, the Fed dutifully lowers interest rates to “stimulate” consumption, the government spends more, and everyone gets worried about a chance of outright default or devaluation.

Here’s the chart for bond yields for the 3-month, 2-year, 5-year, 10-year, and 30-year bonds. (It is missing some data points because the 30-year bond was discontinued for a few years.) As Peter Warburton pointed out in his book, “Debt and Delusion,” during good times there is a convergence of bond yields, while the spread widens during bad times.

linksLinks:

Bloomberg article

Mish’s follow-up

Market folly on curve steepeners

Market folly on curve caps

amznBooks:

Debt and Delusion: Central Bank Follies that Threaten Economic Disaster (Deluxe Edition)

Manias, Panics, and Crashes: A History of Financial Crises (Wiley Investment Classics)

This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly

seriesSeries of interest:

Yields since 1984.

Long bond (30 year)

Yield spread (30 and 2)

Two year and Fed Funds rate

links

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The bun is the lowest form of wheat

November 28th, 2009

There has been some agitation around the situation with wheat. Like a commodity, its long-term price is determined by supply, demand, and inventory.

The graphs below shed some light on the current inventory in the context of the last quarter of century. USDA’s Economic Research Service provides the freshly imported data.

As you can see, the supply is roughly constant after 1989. In the 90s we saw a similar period of relatively low inventory, which tended to maintain price at levels comparatively similar to today’s, with some volatility.

Because of technological advances and global warming, one might believe that the secular trend for price per bushel is down.

seriesSeries of interest:

Inventory (beginning and ending each quarter)

Monthly wheat commodity price

Monthly wheat commodity price, adjusted by CPI

Total wheat supply

Bread consumer price

Bakery and products employment

Agriculture ETF (DBA)

Grains ETN (40% wheat)

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Are mortgage rates going to increase?

November 19th, 2009

Mortgage rates have been stayed incredibly low, and some argue that now is the time or never to jump in a get a giant mortgage, courtesy of the government.

There is a striking correlation between the Federal Funds Rate and mortgage rates. And it is politically inconvenient for the Fed to increase rates while unemployment remains high. And at the rate we are going, it looks like unemployment might even go a bit higher before it plateaus.

Who knows? Mortgage rates might stay low well into 2010.

seriesSeries of interest:

Mortgage rates and Fed funds rate

Mortgage rates VERSUS Fed funds rate

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Poodle McNuggets

November 10th, 2009

When I return from travel in poor regions in the world, I am sometimes asked, half jokingly, whether I have tried dog meat.

Westerners themselves are no strangers to the idea, although Grand Ma’s recipe has been lost. Perhaps unfortunately, one might say, due to cultural prejudice. Luckily, entrails and snails recipes survived.

Quoting from Constantino Bresciani-Turroni, an eye-witness of the German hyper-inflation,

The statistics of meat consumption reveal some curious details which throw an interesting light on social conditions in Germany in 1922 and 1923. While the consumption of the better quality meats (bullocks, calves, pigs, and sheep) declined, the consumption of horse-flesh and still more, of dogs increased: obvious proof, as Wirtschaft und Statistik wrote, of the increasing poverty of the German people. From the last quarter of 1921 to the last quarter of 1922 the number of pigs killed fell from 1,416,051 to 1,131,148, while the number of horses increased from 30,967 to 47,652. During 1923 the fall in the consumption of pork continued, and at the same time the conditions of some classes became so bad that they were eventually obliged to reduce their consumption of horse-flesh. But consumption of dog-flesh increased. Statistics show that 1,090 dogs were slaughtered in the third quarter of 1921; 3,678 in the third quarter of 1922, and 6,430 in the third quarter of 1923.

Unfortunately, we stopped tracking these products. All we have on file is the Bank of Japan (BoJ) consumer price index for some odd item called “Salted and dried horse mackerel”.

linksLinks:

Google books entry

amznBooks:

The Economics Of Inflation – A Study Of Currency Depreciation In Post War Germany

seriesSeries of interest:

Horse mackerel and pork from the BoJ

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The longer view

November 5th, 2009

For those of you who like to take the longer view, our problem with 1753 was fixed. It is now possible to have dates prior to 1753. For the curious, 1753 is the date when the Gregorian calendar was introduced in the UK – and the leading database company, Sybase, was based in the UK, so they banned all dates prior.

Our site’s computational engine was modified to handle dates starting 1 A.D. We don’t have a lot of new data to show you, however. It is mostly data coming from measuringworth.com and Maddison/Gapminder. That’s mostly UK inflation, and GDP and population of countries around the world.

The UK and US inflation charts show how volatile inflation was, even in periods of relative prosperity and economic development.

amznBooks:

The Great Wave: Price Revolutions and the Rhythm of History

Tomorrow’s Gold: Asia’s age of discovery

A History of Interest Rates, Fourth Edition (Wiley Finance)

Forty Centuries of Wage and Price Controls

seriesSeries of interest:

UK population

UK inflation rate

UK Real GDP per capita

Population of China

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Yahoo finance symbols

October 26th, 2009

The site has been extended to import Yahoo Finance series! Those series can be used alongside our series. Just prefix the symbol name with “ystock:”. For instance, “ystock: ^VIX” will get you the CBOE volatility index (looking unreasonably low, I might add).

Also, our charts search boxes now include auto completion (suggestions): type in “treasury bonds” and wait — you will see suggestions of series.

linksLinks:

Yahoo finance

charts search engine

seriesSeries of interest:

VIX (from Yahoo), Fed funds rate, and 10 year bond.

Dow Jones transportation index (from Yahoo) and US Real GDP.

AMD and Intel share price.

S&P500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average.

+

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New home

October 23rd, 2009

We have moved the site to faster servers. Hosting costs are up quite significantly, but it should be much faster now.

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