Ron Insana On Seriousness Of A Global Deflation

Loading...
Loading...

CNBC contributor and Marketfy Maven Ron Insana was recently seen discussing the seriousness of a global deflation and the impact of falling commodity prices.

Markets: Undervaluing Risk Of A Global Deflation Or Taking It Seriously?

When considering the markets stance toward a potential global deflation, Insana responded,“I think more the latter [taking the risk more seriously] than the former.”

“Actually, in a certain sense both, right? I mean, they have been looking past what were yellow flags last year and are now becoming red flags around the world outside the United States,” Insana said.

“U.S. and I think the retail sales data is a little dodgy [Wednesday] morning, but when you look at rates around the world, a Swiss 10-year yield is less than 20 basis points, the German bonds at a half, the Japanese government bond at a quarter percent.”

“These collapses that we are seeing in interest rates. The drop in copper last night was stunning, that’s 13 cents.”

Related Link: Ron Insana Vs. Peter Schiff: Already The Debate Of The Year

Talking Specifics: Falling Commodity Prices

He continued, “Copper’s peak was $4.75. We are down to $2.50 a pound now, that tells you something about Chinese growth. There was a lot of stock piling a couple of years ago, there were some big firms that were warehousing copper to drive the price up, we used to call that a corner, but when you look at commodities, oil being one of them and chief among them, they have collapsed on an average about 40 percent.”

“This is a big deal and it does say a lot about global demand. Again, I think the U.S. is in a better shape as a consumer of commodities; we do get some benefits from those price drops, but this is a dangerous sign overseas.”

Loading...
Loading...
Market News and Data brought to you by Benzinga APIs
Posted In: CNBCGlobalMediaChinaCNBCCommodititesCopperGermanyJapanMarketfy Mavenron insanaSwitzerland
Benzinga simplifies the market for smarter investing

Trade confidently with insights and alerts from analyst ratings, free reports and breaking news that affects the stocks you care about.

Join Now: Free!

Loading...