"Go long agriculture and water and go to the beach," said Mr Fink, whose creation was now the biggest funds manager in the world, with $US3.5 trillion ($3.07 trillion) under management -- more than the GDP of Germany.This is probably right, although I have two caveats. First, it's hard to find a vehicle to use to go long on water. Second, I don't buy that it is so simple to prove that commodity prices will trend upward from their current level, as Matt Yglesias tries to do by saying that
"Put those investments in the bottom drawer for 10 years. It's unlike anything else we have in the world."
Agriculture and water would even beat energy investments, he said.
"They're finding lots of ways to find new energy -- Israel's going to be an exporter of natural gas and I'm hearing there's more oil under Iraq than Saudi Arabia, for instance, although it's not secure."
Over the past ten years, catch-up growth in India, Brazil, and (especially) China has been the majority of world growth. Consequently, the rate of stuff-utilization is going up higher than the rate of stuff-production, meaning we’ll see rising commodity prices rather than falling ones.There are real discontinuities in the supply and demand curves for commodities, and if it were that easy, none of us would have to work our day jobs.
I do agree with Yglesias, though, that the implications of rising commodity prices are decidedly not good for poor countries with stagnant growth. What's going down in Egypt looks very, very real.
P.S. From Felix Salmon, the good thing about Egypt is that the WEF fixed it.
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