From 1980 until the spring of 2002,
10-year Treasury note yields held a positive correlation with the CRB index.
Since 2002, however, there has been a dramatic divergence between Treasury
yields and commodity prices. This trend is unsustainable in the long term
because bond yields must eventually reflect rising inflationary pressures and at
some point offer a positive real after-tax return.
There can be only two possible
conclusions reached when viewing this disparity, shown in the chart below. One
is that commodity prices are no longer an indication of inflationary pressures,
a ridiculous contention that cannot be taken seriously. After all, the CRB Index
contains 19 commodities that include precious metals, base metals, agriculture
and energy, broad measures of the pricing pressures that exist in today's
economy.
The other conclusion-the right one, in my
estimation-is that Treasury securities are grossly overvalued.

Source: Bloomberg
[The 15-year chart above shows the
close relationship that existed between 10-year yields (shown above in white)
and the CRB index (green) from November 1993 into 2002. The decoupling since
that time can clearly be seen here.]
Today's disparity between rising bond
prices and inflation are likely the result of bondholders' fears of holding any
debt not backed by the full faith and credit of the U.S. Government, but this is
a not a disparity that should be able to continue indefinitely. After all, even
according to the "official" inflation measure-the Consumer Price Index, which
likely understates inflation-buyers of 10-year treasuries are currently getting
a negative real return to the tune of nearly a full 1%!
History is clear that we should look for
a reversion to the mean, either via a dramatic downward break in commodity
prices, a sharp increase in Treasury bond yields or some combination of the two.
It is my belief that the continued actions undertaken by the Fed to re-liquefy
the banking sector will engender a further increase in inflation pressures and
send commodity prices higher still.
As a result, the most likely outcome in
this scenario is for a collapse in bond prices as opposed to a dramatic
retrenchment in commodities.
In the current economic environment,
rising interest rates would exacerbate the decline in home prices and restrict
credit availability even further, thus the Fed will be unable to hike rates
until any economic recovery is well underway. So, despite the incessant claims
over the last few days that commodities are "in a bubble," the risk of falling
bond prices far outweighs the risk of falling commodity prices.