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Wall St. warns to begin stockpiling food

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http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/april2008/240408_b_food.htm

Darryl Mason
Your New Reality
Thursday, April 24, 2008

The New York Times recently told its more wealthy readers to consider buying a rural cottage, or even log cabin, to ride out the water and food riots that militarised police forces are preparing and training for, and now Wall Street recommends its readers to begin stockpiling rice and cereals, not only to fend off hunger but as an investment opportunity :


Food prices are already rising here much faster than the returns you are likely to get from keeping your money in a bank or money-market fund. And there are very good reasons to believe prices on the shelves are about to start rising a lot faster.

"Load up the pantry," says Manu Daftary, one of Wall Street's top investors and the manager of the Quaker Strategic Growth mutual fund. "I think prices are going higher. People are too complacent. They think it isn't going to happen here. But I don't know how the food companies can absorb higher costs."


The latest data show cereal prices rising by more than 8% a year. Both flour and rice are up more than 13%. Milk, cheese, bananas and even peanut butter: They're all up by more than 10%. Eggs have rocketed up 30% in a year. Ground beef prices are up 4.8% and chicken by 5.4%.

You can't easily stock up on perishables like eggs or milk. But other products will keep. Among them: Dried pasta, rice, cereals, and cans of everything from tuna fish to fruit and vegetables. The kicker: You should also save money by buying them in bulk.

If this seems a stretch, ponder this: The emerging bull market in agricultural products is following in the footsteps of oil. A few years ago, many Americans hoped $2 gas was a temporary spike. Now it's the rosy memory of a bygone age.

(Article continues below)


The readers of the Wall Street Journal now know it's time to get busy stockpiling. For good reasons. Shortages of rice and other essentials are now being reported in American cities :


Many parts of America, long considered the breadbasket of the world, are now confronting a once unthinkable phenomenon : Major retailers in New York, in areas of New England, and on the West Coast are limiting purchases of flour, rice, and cooking oil as demand outstrips supply. There are also anecdotal reports that some consumers are hoarding grain stocks.
At a Costco Warehouse in Mountain View, Calif., yesterday, shoppers grew frustrated and occasionally uttered expletives as they searched in vain for the large sacks of rice they usually buy.

"Where's the rice?" an engineer from Palo Alto, Calif., Yajun Liu, said. "You should be able to buy something like rice. This is ridiculous."

"There have been so many stories about worldwide shortages that it encourages people to stock up. What most people don't realize is that supply chains have changed, so inventories are very short," Mr.Rawles , a former Army intelligence officer, said. "Even if people increased their purchasing by 20%, all the store shelves would be wiped out."

An anonymous high-tech professional writing on an investment Web site, Seeking Alpha, said he recently bought 10 50-pound bags of rice..."I am concerned that when the news of rice shortage spreads, there will be panic buying and the shelves will be empty in no time. I do not intend to cause a panic, and I am not speculating on rice to make profit. I am just hoarding some for my own consumption," he wrote.

The presidential Bush family's favourite newspaper, the Washington Times, notes the rapidly growing chaos and panic in American food industries, and the demented greed of Wall Street :

Farmers and food executives appealed fruitlessly to federal officials yesterday for regulatory steps to limit speculative buying that is helping to drive food prices higher. Meanwhile, some Americans are stocking up on staples such as rice, flour and oil in anticipation of high prices and shortages spreading from overseas.

Community Futures Trading Commission (CFTC)....regulators said high prices are mostly the result of soaring world demand for grains combined with high fuel prices and drought-induced shortages in many countries.

Costco and other grocery stores in California reported a run on rice, which has forced them to set limits on how many sacks of rice each customer can buy. Filipinos in Canada are scooping up all the rice they can find and shipping it to relatives in the Philippines, which is suffering a severe shortage that is leaving many people hungry.

While farmers here and abroad generally are benefiting from the high prices, even they have been burned by a tidal wave of investors and speculators pouring into the futures markets for corn, wheat, rice and other commodities and who are driving up prices in a way that makes it difficult for farmers to run their businesses.

U.S. wheat stocks are at the lowest levels in 60 years because worldwide consumption of wheat has exceeded production in six of the past eight years, said U.S. Agriculture Department chief economist GeraldBange . Adding to tight supplies was the back-to-back failure of two years of wheat crops caused by drought in Australia, a major wheat exporter, he said.

In addition, the diversion of one-third of the U.S. corn crop into making ethanol for vehicles has increased prices for corn and other staples such as soybeans and cotton as more acreage is set aside for ethanol production.

The upswing in prices has been exaggerated by the massive influx of investors and speculators seeking to profit from rising prices for corn, wheat, oil, gold and other commodities. Big Wall Street firms and hedge funds have taken huge positions in futures markets that once were dominated by relatively small operators such as farmers and grain-elevator owners.

Oil speculation helped drive the price of a barrel beyond $100, and now 'food speculators' are going to do the same for the food you need to buy to feed your family. And the government doesn't want to stop it happening.

Maybe they're hoping Monsanto with save the day, and bellies, of Americans with GM crops, but the 'miracle' of GM crops is turning out to be little more than clever marketing. Monsanto now admits their genetically modified crops do not actually produce higher yields of rice and grains. More food from less acreage is something they aspire to achieve, not something they can actually do yet.

Food prices will stay high simply because oil prices will never drop below $100 again. It will only ever increase, drop back a few dollars, then increase again. We're already being softened up by oil cartels and governments to expect $200 a barrel prices within the next few years.

When oil hits $150 a barrel, trucking and freight companies will start projecting big losses, and will reconsider whether it pays to service longer, less profitable routes to smaller urban population pockets. The sort of places that need nearly everything trucked in, but produce little to truck back out again. When the delivery trucks slow, or cease altogether, most supermarkets will be emptied of food within a few days.

Soaring food prices, and food shortages, are impacting across the world.

In Japan, people are trying to cope with the savage shock of shortages of staple foods, stunning rises in the price of rice and emptying supermarket shelves :

"I went to another supermarket, and then another, and there was no butter at those either. Everywhere I went there were notices saying Japan has run out of butter. I couldn't believe it.."

Japan's acute butter shortage, which has confounded bakeries, restaurants and now families across the country, is the latest unforeseen result of the global agricultural commodities crisis.

A sharp increase in the cost of imported cattle feed and a decline in milk imports, both of which are typically provided in large part by Australia, have prevented dairy farmers from keeping pace with demand.

While soaring food prices have triggered rioting among the starving millions of the third world, in wealthy Japan they have forced a pampered population to contemplate the shocking possibility of a long-term ”” perhaps permanent ”” reduction in the quality and quantity of its food.

The wealthy can only afford to buy the food that the poor cannot while that food is still available. When supplies run out, they too must either go without, grow their own or pay absurd prices for what was, only last year, so cheap.

How bad could global food shortages ultimately get? The lives of many hundreds of millions who have never known hunger before are threatened.

Will we be reduced to the pitiful state of Haitians, who have been driven by food shortages and extreme hunger to start eating the earth beneath their feet?

...the one business booming amid all the gloom is the selling of patties made of mud, oil and sugar...

“It’s salty and it has butter and you don’t know you’re eating dirt,” said Olwich Louis Jeune, 24, who has taken to eating them more often in recent months. “It makes your stomach quiet down.”

The age of cheap and plentiful food, at least from supermarkets, is clearly over.

All governments need to encourage backyard, and balcony, food gardens. Houses that will never sell and are decaying can be bulldozed to make way for community farms. There are at least two or three dozen villages in England returning to thispre-20th century method of feeding the people and bringing the community together.

For city dwellers, however, even those with balcony gardens crowded with carrots, tomatoes, herbs, salad greens and citrus trees, the food staples like milk, cooking oil, butter and wheat, however, will continue to grow only more expensive.

The psychological impact for most Americans of seeing food riots in their towns and cities will be immense, and destructive.
 
Re: wall st warns to begin stockpiling food

I'm going out to replace my gold with cornflakes! Now!!
 
Re: Wall St warns to begin stockpiling food

yes, im today looking at small (100 acre) rural properties in my area. i read somewhere that farmland is a comming investment area. something we havent seen for a while. farmers have been leaving the land. perhaps thats about to change?
 
Re: wall st warns to begin stockpiling food

I'm going out to replace my gold with cornflakes! Now!!

I better go out and get a shotgun to protect my veggie patch.

Might go and trade the dogs in for a couple of chickens and a cow:eek:
 
Re: Wall St warns to begin stockpiling food

Apparently one medium-sized whale can feed a whole big town in Greenland.....

Sheesh. What a year THIS one is turning out to be. Financial chaos. Climate chaos. Food shortage chaos. Oil price chaos. Looming coal shortage chaos...

Anyone got a "nice" headline?




AJ
 
Re: Wall St warns to begin stockpiling food

Sheesh. What a year THIS one is turning out to be. Financial chaos. Climate chaos. Food shortage chaos. Oil price chaos. Looming coal shortage chaos...
The food, oil, coal and to some extent financial situations all come back to the reality that oil rises, peaks and declines and we don't have a viable alternative that is being implemented quickly enough.

The energy situation is actually worse than many realise. In addition to the well publicised oil, coal and food situations there are issues with nuclear and hydro too. In short, we're using up uranium faster than it's being mined whilst building a lot of new reactors at the same time thus guaranteeing even higher consumption in the future.

With hydro, an unsually large amout of the world's capacity is in trouble due to overproduction in recent years (partly as a means of offsetting the oil and coal situation). South America, New Zealand and the Australian schemes all much the same with system overloads and shrinking lakes. Drought has added to the problems too.

And it gets worse... Anecdotally, there are a lot of reports that European consumers have been effectively draining their heating oil tanks in recent times. That's a form of stock draw that doesn't get officially reported anywhere and is clearly not sustainable.

In short, we've burnt up, converted to ethanol, emptied or drained just about everything that keeps the wheels turning or the lights on. :2twocents
 
So Global warming, oil shortage, food, you've all named it above boils down to one thing, tooooo many people. PEOPLE POLUTION

Nostradarmus made dire predictions that he could not define clearly but that it would happen beyond the year 2000 I believe that more than a predictive seer he just calculated forward population growth, its a no brainer.

Back in the 30s' a long term weather forcaster, Indigo Jones, in predictions that proved fairly accurate said that there would be a very bad drought commencing after the turn of the century (2000), he would not define its length except to say that he could see no end even beyond 1015. Clearl;y remember my Father talking about this and he had a cutting out of the Weekly times on the wall at the farmhouse for a number of years. Ironically Dad died during the first bad drought for the Western District in 1969
 
there is some consencus amongst doom and gloomers that the date of 2012 has some significance for humanity.
 
Much of the spike in food price appears to stem from the switch in arable land being used to produce biofuels instead of for food production. At what point does it become far more profitable to produce food than biofuels?

Thailand are putting tariffs on export rice as the price has skyrocketed this year, there are riots in Northern Africa & Malaysia, perhaps we really are the lucky country - by the time the resources boom begins to wane, we will be exporting grain at ridiculous prices.
 
there is some consencus amongst doom and gloomers that the date of 2012 has some significance for humanity.
I think those doom and gloomers just pick a new year every time the last one passes uneventfully.
 
I think those doom and gloomers just pick a new year every time the last one passes uneventfully.


well they picked it a long time ago. about 1400 years ago?(my history aint that good) the ancient mayans calender ends that year.

there are other religions or beliefs that concur with that number, but the mayans are the most quoted.
 
It's real enough .....

NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -- Wal-Mart Stores Inc. said its Sam's Club wholesale club chain is limiting the sale of some rice to four bags per member visit because of what it described as "supply and demand trends."


Jasmine, basmati and long-grain white rices will be subject to those purchase restrictions, as long as they are allowed by law, in the 594 clubs across the U.S., said Sam's Club spokeswoman Kristy Reed. New Mexico and Idaho are the only two states that forbid such practice, she said.
Reed declined to comment specifically on whether the restriction stemmed from a shortage in imports or a rush among consumers to hoard these commodities. Wal-Mart said at this point, it's not limiting purchases of flour or oil.
"We are working with our suppliers to address this matter to ensure we are in stock," Wal-Mart said in a statement.
 
2012 is supposedly the end of the Mayan long count cycle, but it is a cycle: another one starts then too.

GP
 
I think those doom and gloomers just pick a new year every time the last one passes uneventfully.
The oil situation has been "around the year 2000" for at least half a century now. I'd say they weren't far out since in an overall time perspective 2008 is damn close.

And 2012 has been the supposed date of some disaster for as long as I've heard anyone predict it. They never seem certain as to exactly what it will be though.
 
The oil situation has been "around the year 2000" for at least half a century now. I'd say they weren't far out since in an overall time perspective 2008 is damn close.

And 2012 has been the supposed date of some disaster for as long as I've heard anyone predict it. They never seem certain as to exactly what it will be though.

Probably because it looks like being just about everything we can think of.

Now from the optomistic side, if one can survive, the other end of it all may be very good.
 
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